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Contrasting Approaches to Interdisciplinarity at Doctoral Level Students’ experiences. María del Carmen Calatrava Vienna University of Technology Mary Ann Danowitz North Carolina State University. Outline. Need for the study Context & Doctoral Programs Methods Results
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Contrasting Approaches to Interdisciplinarity at Doctoral Level Students’ experiences María del Carmen Calatrava Vienna University of Technology Mary Ann Danowitz North Carolina State University
Outline • Need for the study • Context & Doctoral Programs • Methods • Results • Sense making and implications
Need for the study • Interdisciplinary approaches needed to solve complex real-world problems • European universities responded creating new forms of doctoral education (i.e., doctoral schools and colleges) • Little knowledge on interdisciplinary research (IDR) in such new doctoral programs
Context & Doctoral programs Parallel programs in the samefaculty: • Traditional European • Multidisciplinary PhD School • Specialized PhD College Structured PhD
TraditionalEuropean MultidisciplinaryCS program Specializedprogram Research group Faculty S S S P • Highly regulated • Admissions • Courses • Milestones • Loosely regulated • Admissions • Courses • Majority univ and project assist • Minority self-funded / scholarship • Co-organized by multiple faculties • Covers 1 area • Major area courses • Project ass. + scholarship • All 5 research areas in CS faculty • Major and 2nd area courses • Scholarship 529 Students 43 Students 8 Students
Methods Mixed methods design: • Quantitative: Bibliometric analysis interdisciplinarity • Examine students’ scientific activity • Identify interdisciplinary students • Qualitative: • Factors and processes allowing IDR
Quantitative Method Publication data extraction: • # students: 223 • # students’ publications: 1746 • # students’ references: 16817
Methods A total of 249 CTs
Quantitative Method Top-down approach • Disciplines defined in an existing taxonomy • Interdisciplinarity incorporates the work of 2 or more disciplines [1]. Ref7 Ref1 Ref2 Ref3 Ref4 Ref8 Ref5 Ref6 CT4 CT1 CT2 CT3 [1] National Academies report. Facilitating Interdisciplinary Research. (2005)
Results - Quantitative Method 0.9 0.8 0.7 0.6 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 0 TradProg Multidisc Prog Specialized Prog Purposive sampling of interview candidates Interdisciplinarity Students
Qualitative Method Semi-structured interviews • Questions developed from the literature • 50-80 minutes • 9 Participants Networking Doctoral program Collaboration Opportunities Research group Interdisciplinarity Experiences Difficulties Publications Background Supervision Faculty Methods Expectations
Results – Qualitative Method Factors and processes allowing IDR: One would expect influence from: • Courses different disciplines • Participation of different faculties • Interdisciplinary research projects interdisciplinary thinking • Individual background characteristics • Program structure and processes
Results – Qualitative Method Individual background characteristics • Values “For me it is not so important that I have a big technological invention, but that I solve [a real-world problem]. For me it is not just a use case that I would easily exchange for some other problem.”
Results – Qualitative Method Individual background characteristics • Values • Motivation “I suddenly identified my field for me because it is the intersection of computation, which is my profession and my interest, and [other discipline] which is also my passion and my interest.”
Results – Qualitative Method Individual background characteristics • Values • Motivation • Skills and knowledge “I have always been interested in [other discipline]. I have been working in [other discipline] for my master's thesis and a job that I had previously.”
Results – Qualitative Method Program structure & processes • Autonomy “The doctoral school gives you a lot of independence, because no one is telling you what to do. You choose what you want to do. […] It is possible to do a PhD in these areas and this is where I contribute.”
Results – Qualitative Method Program structure & processes • Autonomy • Funding • Project assistantship: Topic and contribution fixed by project • University assistantship: Topic aligns with research group • Scholarship and self-funding: Topic agreed with supervisor
Results – Qualitative Method Program structure & processes • Autonomy • Funding • Supervision “My supervisor is not a hard-core disciplinary person, so that's makes it easier for me. […] He encourages us... he finds it very valuable that we combine two topics, one from IT and one from the real world.”
Sense making and implications • Courses/faculty from different disciplines is insufficient to foster IDR. • Greater attention should be directed to: • Students’ characteristics and antecedent experiences • Supervision supporting IDR • Funding • Interdisciplinary project work beyond one faculty
Key References • European University Association. (2007). Doctoral programmes in Europe’s universities: Achievements and challenges. Brussels, Belgium. • Nyhagen, G. M., & Baschung, L. (2013). New organizational structures and the transformation of academic work. Higher Education, 66 (4), 409-423. • Wagner, Caroline S., et al. (2011). Approaches to understanding and measuring interdisciplinary scientific research (IDR): A review of the literature. Journal of Informetrics 5.1 :14-26. • Borrego, M., & Newswander, L. K. (2010). Definitions of interdisciplinary research: Toward graduate-level interdisciplinary learning outcomes. The Review of Higher Education, 34(1), 61-84. • Stokols, D. (2012). Training the next generation of transdisciplinarians. Enhancing Interdisciplinary Communication. Thousand Oaks: Sage.
Thank you María del Carmen Calatrava Vienna University of Technology carmen.calatrava@tuwien.ac.at Mary Ann Danowitz North Carolina State University mdanowi@ncsu.edu