Designing for Interdisciplinary Teaching and Learning in Higher Education: A Phenomenographic Study of Course Leaders’ Experiences
Access status:
Open Access
Type
ThesisThesis type
Doctor of PhilosophyAuthor/s
Ripley, DwayneAbstract
Interdisciplinarity has become a core aim of many universities, resulting in the expansion of
interdisciplinary courses that prepare students to live and work in a world marked by increasing
complexity, uncertainty, and rapid technological advancement. However, there remains ...
See moreInterdisciplinarity has become a core aim of many universities, resulting in the expansion of interdisciplinary courses that prepare students to live and work in a world marked by increasing complexity, uncertainty, and rapid technological advancement. However, there remains limited clarity and agreement on the meanings, purposes, and practices of interdisciplinary education. This thesis identifies and maps out the variation in the understandings, conceptions, and experiences of designing for interdisciplinary teaching and of 23 course leaders—academics who made substantial intellectual contributions to the conceptualisation, creation, design, redesign, or enactment of interdisciplinary courses. The thesis investigates: (1) how course leaders understand interdisciplinarity, (2) how they conceive of its purpose in interdisciplinary education, (3) how they approach interdisciplinary teaching and learning in their course designs, (4) how they experience educational design processes, and (5) how they experience their institutional environment when developing and sustaining interdisciplinary courses. Together the outcomes contribute in ways that synthesising individual accounts of practice synthesis approaches cannot, showing the relationships between course leaders’ different ways of experiencing. The thesis shows that designing for interdisciplinary teaching and learning was experienced as collaborative, knowledge-centred, characterised by ongoing learning, plural, situated, and challenging. These outcomes highlight the importance of informal collegial networks, research on design practices, and conceptualising design work as knowledge work. It further discusses the potential of interdisciplinary design practices to contribute to disciplinary education and to shape their institutional environments. This thesis can be of use to interdisciplinary course leaders and others responsible for creating and sustaining interdisciplinary courses and programmes in universities.
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See moreInterdisciplinarity has become a core aim of many universities, resulting in the expansion of interdisciplinary courses that prepare students to live and work in a world marked by increasing complexity, uncertainty, and rapid technological advancement. However, there remains limited clarity and agreement on the meanings, purposes, and practices of interdisciplinary education. This thesis identifies and maps out the variation in the understandings, conceptions, and experiences of designing for interdisciplinary teaching and of 23 course leaders—academics who made substantial intellectual contributions to the conceptualisation, creation, design, redesign, or enactment of interdisciplinary courses. The thesis investigates: (1) how course leaders understand interdisciplinarity, (2) how they conceive of its purpose in interdisciplinary education, (3) how they approach interdisciplinary teaching and learning in their course designs, (4) how they experience educational design processes, and (5) how they experience their institutional environment when developing and sustaining interdisciplinary courses. Together the outcomes contribute in ways that synthesising individual accounts of practice synthesis approaches cannot, showing the relationships between course leaders’ different ways of experiencing. The thesis shows that designing for interdisciplinary teaching and learning was experienced as collaborative, knowledge-centred, characterised by ongoing learning, plural, situated, and challenging. These outcomes highlight the importance of informal collegial networks, research on design practices, and conceptualising design work as knowledge work. It further discusses the potential of interdisciplinary design practices to contribute to disciplinary education and to shape their institutional environments. This thesis can be of use to interdisciplinary course leaders and others responsible for creating and sustaining interdisciplinary courses and programmes in universities.
See less
Date
2025Rights statement
The author retains copyright of this thesis. It may only be used for the purposes of research and study. It must not be used for any other purposes and may not be transmitted or shared with others without prior permission.Faculty/School
Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, Sydney School of Education and Social WorkAwarding institution
The University of SydneyShare