Sustaining collegiality through the imperative of interdisciplinary practice

Contemporary universities in the developed world face a plethora of increased – and changing – responsibilities. We are the global university, responsible for the production of worker citizens who will be 'prepared' for an extraordinarily diverse set of challenges across all facets of the...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kathryn Hegarty
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: UCL Press 2009-02-01
Series:London Review of Education
Online Access:https://www.scienceopen.com/document?vid=3e26ef1a-9d69-4e33-a4ed-d6dcebb00806
id doaj-5e79198206ae45b29c1107b35304c8db
record_format Article
spelling doaj-5e79198206ae45b29c1107b35304c8db2020-12-16T09:45:44ZengUCL PressLondon Review of Education1474-84792009-02-0110.1080/14748460802700744Sustaining collegiality through the imperative of interdisciplinary practiceKathryn HegartyContemporary universities in the developed world face a plethora of increased – and changing – responsibilities. We are the global university, responsible for the production of worker citizens who will be 'prepared' for an extraordinarily diverse set of challenges across all facets of their lives. Much of our research concentration in the academy necessarily requires a plural, diverse approach to developing the appropriate capabilities for our students. Multidisciplinarity is the simple reality of the professional world. Universities have at their disposal sophisticated self-aware multidisciplinary practitioners. Or do they? How is multidisciplinarity perceived and understood in university departments and research teams? What are the tangible measures of successful multi-disciplinary practice? Drawing on a cultural studies framework, this paper will consider the challenges to academic identity and collegiality which reside in the assumed move to multiple ways of knowing in discovery and scholarship. How do we open to, and learn from, each others' disciplinary tools, traditions and epistemologies? How are such collegial approaches – concrete collegialities – embedded in our starting discipline? What are the understandings and limitations we face in seeking to move to a rich meaningful inter disciplinary practice? I will explore these questions in relation to the UN Decade on Education for Sustainability and Sustainable Development.https://www.scienceopen.com/document?vid=3e26ef1a-9d69-4e33-a4ed-d6dcebb00806
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kathryn Hegarty
spellingShingle Kathryn Hegarty
Sustaining collegiality through the imperative of interdisciplinary practice
London Review of Education
author_facet Kathryn Hegarty
author_sort Kathryn Hegarty
title Sustaining collegiality through the imperative of interdisciplinary practice
title_short Sustaining collegiality through the imperative of interdisciplinary practice
title_full Sustaining collegiality through the imperative of interdisciplinary practice
title_fullStr Sustaining collegiality through the imperative of interdisciplinary practice
title_full_unstemmed Sustaining collegiality through the imperative of interdisciplinary practice
title_sort sustaining collegiality through the imperative of interdisciplinary practice
publisher UCL Press
series London Review of Education
issn 1474-8479
publishDate 2009-02-01
description Contemporary universities in the developed world face a plethora of increased – and changing – responsibilities. We are the global university, responsible for the production of worker citizens who will be 'prepared' for an extraordinarily diverse set of challenges across all facets of their lives. Much of our research concentration in the academy necessarily requires a plural, diverse approach to developing the appropriate capabilities for our students. Multidisciplinarity is the simple reality of the professional world. Universities have at their disposal sophisticated self-aware multidisciplinary practitioners. Or do they? How is multidisciplinarity perceived and understood in university departments and research teams? What are the tangible measures of successful multi-disciplinary practice? Drawing on a cultural studies framework, this paper will consider the challenges to academic identity and collegiality which reside in the assumed move to multiple ways of knowing in discovery and scholarship. How do we open to, and learn from, each others' disciplinary tools, traditions and epistemologies? How are such collegial approaches – concrete collegialities – embedded in our starting discipline? What are the understandings and limitations we face in seeking to move to a rich meaningful inter disciplinary practice? I will explore these questions in relation to the UN Decade on Education for Sustainability and Sustainable Development.
url https://www.scienceopen.com/document?vid=3e26ef1a-9d69-4e33-a4ed-d6dcebb00806
work_keys_str_mv AT kathrynhegarty sustainingcollegialitythroughtheimperativeofinterdisciplinarypractice
_version_ 1724381266415976448