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INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES INTO THE 21ST CENTURYAuthor(s): William H. Newell and Julie Thompson KleinReviewed work(s):Source: The Journal of General Education, Vol. 45, No. 2 (1996), pp. 152-169Published by: Penn State University PressStable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/27797297 .
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INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES INTO THE 21ST CENTURY*
William H. Newell and Julie Thompson Klein
The individual articles in this issue may all be viewed within the
broader context of changes that have altered the role of interdisci
plinary studies in American higher education. Over the latter half
of the twentieth century, interdisciplinary studies has undergone a transition from peripheral experiments to a complex set of ac
tivities that are increasingly regarded as central to the academy. The resulting structural transformation that is already underway will have profound consequences for the ways that faculty carry out their professional lives, what students learn and how they learn, as well as the ways colleges and universities are administered.
We examine here the changes that have occurred over the past three decades, the variety of structural responses to those changes and some of their implications, as well as continuing impediments to change.
Interdisciplinary Studies in the Late Twentieth Century
As the era of educational innovation that characterized the late
1960s and early 1970s was waning, interdisciplinary undergradu ate education was largely identified with radical innovation. By the mid-1980s, interdisciplinary studies had moved from the radi
cal fringe into the liberal mainstream (Newell, 1988, p. 6). The
previous era was characterized by cluster colleges and courses in
women's, ethnic, urban, and environmental studies (Gaff, 1989, p.
* This article grew out of presentations by Newell and Klein at the American Association for Higher Education conference, March 23-26, 1994 in Chicago, Illinois.
JGE: THE JOURNAL OF EDUCATION, Vol. 45, No. 1, 1996.
Copyright ? 1996 The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA.
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INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES INTO THE 21ST CENTURY 153
5). More recent interdisciplinary reforms have tended to be "reno vative rather than radical." They are linked with the need to revi talize the core of liberal arts by fostering coherence and excel
lence in higher-order skills of integration and synthesis (Newell, 1988, p. 8).
General and liberal education have been major sites in this de
velopment. When Jerry Gaff surveyed over 300 colleges and uni versities between 1989 and 1991, he found that 67 percent utilized
interdisciplinary core courses in their general education programs,
especially in institutions undergoing large-scale change (1991, pp. 72, 91). In an earlier survey of 235 interdisciplinary undergradu ate programs conducted in 1985-1986, William Newell discovered that programs were larger than expected and found in every geo
graphical region and every institutional type, spanning public and
private, religious and sectarian, large and small institutions. In
terdisciplinary innovation was dominated by general education
programs, of which two-thirds were not alternative tracks but in
stitution-wide requirements. (Newell, 1988, pp. 1, 6). These trends continue unabated.
The growing interdisciplinarity of general education stems from several sources. In some cases, faculty schooled in the 1960s have institutionalized innovative and interdisciplinary elements they found of value in their own education. Integrative approaches have also been compatible with other reforms such as active learn
ing and collaborative learning, learning communities, critical
thinking, and multiculturalism. Additionally, general education has been a major place for curricular revisions that respond to new interdisciplinary knowledges, approaches, and needs. The
greatest growth in general education subject matter today is in
interdisciplinary fields such as international studies, American multicultural and gender studies, and the inherently synoptic ar eas of historical consciousness and ethical understanding (Casey, 1994, p. 56).
By the early 1980s the link between honors and interdisciplinarity was also apparent. Interdisciplinary honors
programs were proliferating in the early 1980s at triple the rate of the 1960s and 1970s (Newell, 1988, p.7). The national honors
movement promoted interdisciplinarity for the same reasons it has been gaining wider attention in general and liberal education. In
tegrated approaches to knowledge and problem solving require excellence in higher-order thinking skills of integration and syn thesis.
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154 THE JOURNAL OF GENERAL EDUCATION
Interdisciplinary studies is further evident in a variety of inter
disciplinary fields and specialties identified by the Interdiscipli nary Studies Task Force for the three-year study of the undergradu ate major sponsored by the Association of American Colleges and
Universities (then AAC). Some, such as American studies and
area studies, date from the first half of the twentieth century. Oth
ers, such as urban studies and ethnic studies, arose in the 1960s
and 1970s. Over the past two decades, cultural studies and sci
ence, technology, and society studies have become prominent. The
task force also found a wide range of interdisciplinary majors that
span international and public policy studies, labor and legal stud
ies, programs in human and in social ecology, neuroscience and
cognitive science, biochemistry and molecular biology, environ
mental sciences and marine biology, cognitive and information
sciences ("Interdisciplinary Studies," 1990a, 1990b).
Although linked by interdisciplinary identity, these examples differ. They emanate from different sources, entail different kinds
of work, and have different implications for academic structure.
Programs in women's studies and environmental studies, for in
stance, both arose in the 1970s. Their motivations for interdisci
plinary study differed, though, from each other and from general education. In the words of AAC's Task Force on Women's Stud
ies, what began as "compensatory education" became nothing less
than "a comprehensive intellectual and social critique" ("Women's
Studies," 1990, p. 209). This critique spanned the disciplines, the
organizational structure of the academy, and the very nature of
knowledge. The response, however slow and begrudging, has been
a radical rethinking of the status quo in teaching and research.
Environmental studies tended to place greater emphasis on the
interconnectedness of the world and the need for cooperation
among disciplines. Cooperation is necessary for understanding those interconnections and for solving environmental problems.
While most environmental research continues to be primarily dis
ciplinary, there is on-going pressure to combine those findings into an interdisciplinary understanding of the external world and
to achieve integrated solutions.
The more profound and comprehensive reason for change is
knowledge itself. When Clifford Geertz announced in 1980 that
genres were becoming blurred, he gave a name to a phenomenon that is now considered commonplace. Scholars borrow frequently from other disciplines, so much so that disciplinary boundaries are becoming increasingly permeable and knowledge is widely
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INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES INTO THE 21ST CENTURY 155
considered to be increasingly interdisciplinary. Cross-fertiliza
tion of methods and concepts and the evolution of new hybrid
disciplinary practices and interdisciplinary fields have been ma
jor factors in this development. The picture of knowledge that
emerges is marked by heterogeneity, complexity, and hybridity (Easton and Schelling, 1991; Gibbons, et al., 1994; Klein, 1996). Correspondingly, in the curriculum the rhetoric of "knowledge
explosion," "global awareness," and "blurred disciplinary bound
aries" signals an era in which founding assumptions and schol
arly practices in many fields have become matters of scrutiny and
debate ("Challenge," 1990, p. 2). One of the strongest indicators is science. In the undergradu
ate curriculum, science literacy, the teaching of science as a lib
eral art, and discovery-based learning have had impacts in gen eral education and in disciplinary majors. At both the undergradu ate and graduate levels, new fields of knowledge?from environ
mental science and materials science to sociology of science and
studies of science, technology, and society?have realigned tradi
tional notions of disciplinary relations. Many fields and specialty interests in science today have evolved from the growing com
plexity of problem domains. Mission-oriented research differs
from other forms of interdisciplinary study. Rather than forming a new hybrid discipline?such as biochemistry or molecular biol
ogy?or devising a new category of knowledge?such as women or environment?they comprise pragmatic integrations of disci
plinary components relevant to the practical problem at hand.
There is a growing inclusion of new interdisciplinary elements in courses and programs in professional education as well, as in
management studies in engineering, social studies in medicine,
foreign languages or computing in others. Geoffrey Squires' re cent observations about the United Kingdom are equally true in the United States: "The addition of the word 'studies' to a degree title often implies a shift away from a conventional disciplinary approach." This development, and the problems of interrelating constituent elements in these fields, are often discussed not in terms
of "interdisciplinarity" but companion notions of "integration" and "coordination." The nature of the problem tends to be perceived in primarily pragmatic or organizational rather than theoretical terms. The exception is newer professions that respond to chang ing problem awareness in society, such as sports science or trans
port studies, where the identity of the field is not well established
(Squires, 1992, pp. 205-7).
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156 THE JOURNAL OF GENERAL EDUCATION
This rather brief account indicates why interdisciplinary study is no longer characterized by a single kind of program or field.
This development has powerful implications for institutional struc
ture.
Structural Responses
The different motivations for interdisciplinary study?general edu
cation, compatibility with other educational reforms, radical cri
tique, interconnectedness, integrative skills and pragmatic prob lem solving, transformations in disciplinary practices, and new
interdisciplinary fields of knowledge?have manifested them
selves in different structural forms. The response has not been a
simple matter of adding more forms on top of existing forms. A core concept in general systems theory helps to explain what is
happening. The structure of higher education has been shifting from simple
and complicated systems to complex systems. This trend will
continue into the twenty-first century. Simple systems may have
multiple levels and multiple connections. Yet, they are arranged in a hierarchy and they operate according to a single set of rules
that can be understood using reductionist thinking (Klein and
Newell, 1996). Think of a state map, where cities, towns, and
villages are depicted in a hierarchy by size and connected by roads
that are also depicted in a hierarchy from thruway to byway. Com
plicated systems are essentially variations on the themes of simple
systems. In any Rand McNally Road Atlas, for example, simple state systems are connected through national maps of interstates, national parks, etc.
Complex systems behave differently. They may contain simple or complicated systems, but the connections linking them are non
linear. They may encompass subsystems based on incompatible
assumptions. For example, environmental decisions may require cost or value assessments of items (e.g., health, open space, aes
thetic views) that are not quantifiable by economic means. The
interaction of genuine or perceived incompatibilities gives com
plex systems their unique unstable behaviors. Complex systems also tend to be non-hierarchically structured and may have a cha
otic element. They obey multiple conflicting logics, utilize both
positive and negative feedback, anticipatory behaviors such as
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INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES INTO THE 21ST CENTURY 157
feedforward, and reveal multiplicative or synergistic effects. To
understand them at the larger integrated level, reductionist think
ing must be replaced by nonlinear thinking, pattern recognition, and analogy. The terminology and methods for understanding the
system also change as one moves through it (Prigogine and
Stengers, 1984, p.42).
Returning to the analogy of a state map, think of a set of over
lays. Each overlay depicts another way the state is structured.
The categories of organization may be school, sewer, and fire dis
tricts; political wards; economic markets; federal districts for air
and water quality, national forests, or poverty pockets that over
lap state boundaries; and ecological zones such as airsheds and
watersheds that overlap national boundaries. Decisions made in one setting can have significant and unpredictable effects on de
cision makers in other settings. The effects can be reinforcing
(positive), off-setting (negative), compounding (multiplicative), or create "wild problems" with unforeseen changes of direction,
magnitude, and timing (synergetic). The very logic and methods
by which decisions are made differs from economic to political to
ecological to social settings, resulting in high levels of frustra
tion.
Compounding this is the issue of timing of data gathering and
decision making. Lower levels of a system can generate more
data than managerial or supervisory levels are able to digest
quickly. Thus delays are inherent in complex managerial tasks, sometimes to the point of overwhelming the process. There is
also a degree of uncertainty concerning the relative importance of
each datum. Rejection or acceptance of "facts" is heavily depen dent on the pattern(s) of knowledge decision makers have ab
sorbed. It is therefore important that interdisciplinary studies have
curricular components which are relevant to coping with com
plexity. In academic structures, the simple systems in place at mid-cen
tury were comprised primarily of separate colleges and universi
ties with their divisions. The Rand McNally of the typical col
lege or university depicted the primary units of disciplinary de
partments, general education programs divided into disciplinary
requirements, courses controlled by departments, and independent study contracted through distinct departments. Large universities
were complicated systems, in that they were comprised of sepa rate but linked colleges or schools that operated by essentially the
same principles. Most intellectual activity was channeled through,
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158 THE JOURNAL OF GENERAL EDUCATION
took place within, and was focused by these structures. In such a
system, administration could be and often was hierarchical, though as the power of disciplines continued to grow decisionmaking at
some institutions became decentralized at the departmental level.
The reductionist notion made sense in this structural context. The
university as a whole was the sum of its disciplinary departments. What was good for traditional disciplinary categories and depart ment structure was good for the institution as a whole.
A variety of interdisciplinary movements challenged this logic in the first half of the twentieth century. Prior to the 1960s, how
ever, most interdisciplinary activity had to operate through or ac
commodate itself to these traditional simple or complicated struc
tures. American Studies programs, for example, usually consisted
of a coordinated set of existing disciplinary courses, administered
by a single faculty member or a cross-departmental committee.
In either case, the faculty were located in disciplinary departments. At a large university, the program might be housed in a separate office. Such programs, nonetheless, tended by and large to be
marginal to the primary business of the university. Even into the
1960s and 1970s, most new interdisciplinary programs still re
mained confined to these structures. The notable exceptions were
colleges and universities organized around interdisciplinary struc
tural principles. When the Board of Regents of the University of
Wisconsin at Green Bay decided in 1969, for example, that the new university take as its special mission the "interdisciplinary,
problem-centered study of humans and their environment," orga
nizing the faculty into interdisciplinary concentrations not disci
plinary departments, they initiated a structural change that increas
ingly challenged the dominance of the traditional discipline-based system throughout the Wisconsin system of higher education
(Newell, 1986, p. 211). Administrators charged with state-wide
educational responsibilities had to fundamentally rethink them.
The interdisciplinary nature of Hampshire College, which started
admitting students in 1970, affected the policies of the Five Col
lege Consortium. The interdisciplinary Evergreen State College, which first admitted students in 1971, had delayed but even more
pronounced ripple effects through the Washington Center for Im
proving the Quality of Undergraduate Education. Founded in 1985 at The Evergreen State College, the Center epitomizes the move
into complexity. The Center links together learning communities
and individual faculty at over 30 colleges and universities in the state. Its enables faculty exchanges, faculty development confer
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INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES INTO THE 21ST CENTURY 159
enees, and coordinated funding from the state legislature for multi institutional change. Testimonials from participating faculty indi cate their source of intellectual inspiration and professional re
wards, and the locus of their activities, have expanded well be
yond their department (Tollefson, 1991, p. 10). The 1960s and 70s were crucial in the movement into complex
systems. The new programs, fields, and institutions introduced
into higher education were no less significant than the rise of re
search centers and problem-focused research projects on univer
sity campuses during the World War II era. They were alternative structures that challenged the logic of the dominant, discipline based system. At mid-century and even into the 1960s, they were
still sufficiently few in number to be considered anomalies. From a structural standpoint, they were exceptions that could be accom
modated or forced into an accommodationist posture. Over the course of the next two decades, the number and variety of bound
ary crossing forms and activities increased, though as a result of
outward looking assessment rather than an inward self-reflective
focus. This development, coupled with the pressing weight of new developments in disciplinary research, the rise of new inter
disciplinary fields, and new demands upon the academy strained
the older logic of simple-complicated systems. They could no
longer be so easily accommodated.
As a result of this history, colleges and universities now have not only familiar interdisciplinary forms?programs, centers, and
institutes?but also new forms and alliances. They include learn
ing communities and course clusters; faculty study groups, collo
quia, seminars, and workshops; joint appointments, affiliate pro
grams, faculty exchanges, and visiting professorships; shared fa
cilities, data bases, and instrumentation labs; joint student-fac
ulty , problem-focused, and collaborative research projects; peda
gogical-focused projects such as collaborative learning and criti
cal thinking; inter-institutional consortia and new alliances con
necting academy, industry, and government (Klein, 1996). These
forms and alliances do more than mess up organizational charts.
They are increasingly regarded as primary sites of intellectual
work, not peripheral to the main enterprise.
Many are informal and low profile, individually ephemeral but
collectively enduring. Their presence documents not only the
growing permeation of disciplinary boundaries but also the inad
equacy of older dichotomies that separate disciplinary and inter
disciplinary study (Klein, 1996; Klein and Newell, 1996). Link
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160 THE JOURNAL OF GENERAL EDUCATION
ages across activities are often informal. A general education com
mittee, for instance, may seek input from a faculty study group and test a pilot course through a learning community organized
by a regional consortium. Learning communities operate by a
different logic from departmental structures, yet they are grafted onto them. They have become popular strategies for both pro
gram and faculty development. In many instances, they enable
faculty to keep up with complexifying elements in their own dis
ciplines. Even interdisciplinary programs that ostensibly fit within a tra
ditional structure can end up challenging business as usual for
other components in that structure. The School of Interdiscipli nary Studies at Miami University, founded in 1974, is a four-year,
degree-granting program of interdisciplinary courses in humani
ties and arts, social sciences, and natural sciences and technology that feature discovery learning and peer tutoring; contract majors
culminating in year-long senior projects; and writing and quanti tative reasoning across the curriculum. The living-learning di
mension of the School's mission repeatedly brought tensions be tween divisions of the University charged with administering aca
demic and student affairs because faculty had offices in residence
halls, which operate by different rules, even different calendars, than academic buildings; some faculty actually lived in residence
halls which still operated in loco parentis; while students lived in the same building where they had classes. Only seven years after the conception of the School as an experimental program, Miami
modeled its honors program on the School in 1981. Four years later, in 1985, a Liberal Education Task Force under the leader
ship of the Dean of the School began a general education reas
sessment which culminated in a proposal for the university-wide Miami Plan for Liberal Education adopted in 1989. This proposal
incorporates many interdisciplinary features from the School such as foundation courses and capstone experiences. As part of its
implementation strategy, the Liberal Education Council promoted a variety of interdisciplinary activities?faculty study groups in areas such as legal studies, faculty participation in the Institute in
Integrative Studies, faculty brown bag lunches?and set up a com
mittee to identify structural impediments to interdisciplinary teach
ing (many of whose recommendations were subsequently imple mented). These activities in turn have had pedagogical, curricu
lar, and research impacts on other parts of the University. Such examples indicate how an individual interdisciplinary el
ement can permeate an institution, stimulating interdisciplinary
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INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES INTO THE 21ST CENTURY 161
approaches in other parts of the curriculum, influencing the shape of other programs, and affecting decisions about institution-wide
mandates. In the contexts of general education and honors, fac
ulty from different disciplines often come together in planning and teaching teams that do not fit easily into departmental struc
tures. These hybrid structures are at odds with traditional proce dures for staffing, budget allocations, faculty loads, and faculty rewards. When they occurred only occasionally, they could be
dealt with on an ad hoc basis. As interdisciplinary activity has
become a more common component of general education and hon
ors, administrators and curriculum committees have needed to
ensure a continuing pool of courses and faculty to teach them. In
this situation, structural change is evident in the form of ongoing
provisions for faculty development and regular involvement in
interdisciplinary teaching. One of the additional lessons of complex structure is that fac
ulty development and revitalization is occurring outside formal
structures. Much of the intellectual vitality of women's studies
programs comes not through departments but hybrid structures
such as a women's center, brown bag lunches, and ancillary cam
pus organizations ranging from the Association for Women Fac
ulty and Staff to groups planning memorial lectures. These struc
tures connect, in turn, to a complex network of women's organi zations outside the academy such as the League of Women Vot
ers, the National Organization for Women, and American Asso
ciation of University Women. They are linked to academic teach
ing and research in a variety of often informal ways. Other pro
grams, such as Afro-American studies, tend to be similarly orga nized. Environmental studies operates through a network of cen
ters, institutes, joint grant proposals, shared scientific equipment, inter-university consortia, and other nontraditional organizational structures. In some cases these structures merely mess up the
organizational charts. In others, they strain the budgetary, staff
ing, and promotion/tenure procedures embedded within the tradi
tional departmental structure.
Graduate programs in the sciences intensify the structural prob lems of staffing, load, and reward found in the undergraduate cur
riculum because high-paid faculty, low student/faculty ratios, and
large equipment budgets are often involved. The creation as well as the dissemination of knowledge is at stake. Interdisciplinary teaching does occur in less visible ways, in the form of collabora tive work, problem-focused projects, research apprenticeships, and
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162 THE JOURNAL OF GENERAL EDUCATION
clinical practice. The call for teaching reforms in graduate edu
cation, though, echoes the call in the undergraduate curriculum.
Faculty engaged in interdisciplinary research need to do interdis
ciplinary teaching that reflects changes in their disciplines and new interdisciplinary fields and problems. The need for new re
ward criteria is greatest wherever all research and teaching in a
unit is interdisciplinary. This can occur at the graduate as well as
undergraduate level.
The implications of complexity are apparent not only in insti
tutional structure but also in the roles that faculty, students, and
administrators play in that structure.
Implications
In the past, strains in the system led to thinking in terms of "ratio
nalizing" the system by clarifying relationships between and within
levels. Whatever its intellectual and educational value, interdis
ciplinary study was in most places regarded as an administrative
inconvenience. Some small liberal arts colleges may still be ad
equately characterized by simple structures. However, just as dis
ciplines can no longer accurately be thought of as isolated intel
lectual fiefdoms, the intellectual life of the faculty no longer takes
place exclusively within departments at the local level and disci
plinary boundaries at the national and international level.
Consider how many faculty today spend their time. A biologist
may be teaching in a new basic science course while piloting the
introductory course for a new environmental studies program. A
chemical engineer may be involved in new product design in an
industrial partnership program while working with departmental
colleagues on introducing more training in collaborative and inte
grative skills into the engineering curriculum. An historian may be teaching a senior thesis course while conducting research on
labor history. A member of the speech department may be teach
ing service courses in oral communication while helping design a
new media studies program. A member of the art department may be teaching period courses in art history while also teaching a
course in the women's studies program and helping design an ex
hibit on gender representations at a local art museum. And so
on....
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INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES INTO THE 21ST CENTURY 163
These situations are not atypical. For the participating indi
viduals, not only does self-identity change but disciplinary alle
giance is complexified. They begin to shift into a more inclusive both/and thinking, not the simpler either/or thinking of the past. The problems and interests they work on exhibit a comparable
plurality. New developments in knowledge mean that many fac
ulty have closer discourse links with members of other disciplines. Many current issues, problems, and questions?e.g., crime, rain
forest ecology, or African-American culture?create a wider net
work of alliances with scholars who have diverse backgrounds but similar interests. The underlying theme of these developments is complexity, in both intellectual issues and pragmatic problems that derive from outside the academy. The realization that many
important problems do not fit neatly into traditional disciplinary domains is as commonplace as beliefs that boundaries are blur
ring and that knowledge is becoming increasingly interdiscipli nary. No one method or approach can adequately deal with the
problems of population, health, environmental pollution, crime, and hunger. Multidisciplinary and client-based problems are also
driving the need for structures orthogonal to traditional divisions. The clients of the university, in this sense, include students, citi
zens, and members of government and industry (Plater, 1995, p. 25).
In many curricular and research projects, the locus of expertise has shifted from the single worldview or perspective of one disci
pline to the problem or topic at hand. In this circumstance, syn thesis and conceptualization of wholes are as important as analy sis and understanding of the parts. Process is also as important as
content. Faculty and students alike need to know how to work
with other disciplines and pertinent interdisciplinary approaches such as systems, metaphors, and "both/and" thinking skills. Modes of operation are placing greater demands on collaborative skills as faculty interact within wider circles on campus and across or
ganizational and electronic networks. Similarly, students' work
and career patterns are placing greater emphasis on networking capacities and the ability to work with different kinds of informa
tion. The shift in teaching from what we know to how we learn
reflects this trend. Faculty are becoming more open to collabora tive styles and student participation in the learning process.
In a world of complex structures, general education and the
major will loom larger as sites of interdisciplinary thinking than
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164 THE JOURNAL OF GENERAL EDUCATION
in the past. The resurgence in general education will continue
because general education is a vital point of cross-fertilization, a
place to interact with colleagues from different disciplines and to
focus on teaching practices. A diversity of structures will also
continue. General education core courses will coexist with smaller
alternative general education programs whose infrastructure re
sults from learning communities. These communities will be ini
tiated by consortia or faculty study groups interested in both
changes in knowledge and in student learning stages and styles.
Interdisciplinary general education courses will also be offered
by individual faculty in traditional departments in order to fulfill
disciplinary general education requirements. Joint student-fac
ulty research projects are already growing out of cutting edge gen eral education courses. Because of the complex interactions and
synergistic effects among these formal and informal structures, the evolution of interdisciplinary general education cannot be pre dicted or controlled by a single, simple model.
Interdisciplinary majors will also attain added importance for
several reasons. As the result of a variety of complementary teach
ing and learning reforms, the very notion of coverage has been
shifting from subject matter and acquisition of facts to process and skills. The broad curricular and pedagogical trends revealed
in A AC's mammoth study of the major and subsequent project on
Reforming Majors underscores the importance of multidisciplinary and interdisciplinary experiences that acquaint students with im
portant developments in their disciplinary and professional fields
and the complexities of the modern world. Skills of integration and synthesis are also integral to development of critical perspec tive. The commitment to connected learning fostered by interdis
ciplinary study encompasses integrative learning within the ma
jor, integration between the major and general education, and in
tegration between the major and students' commitments beyond the academy. Greater problem-focused and theme-based learn
ing, interdisciplinary seminars, and integrative capstone seminars
and projects are among the major curricular devices being incor
porated into the major ("Changing the Major," p. 1). The implications for administrators and curriculum committees
strike at the heart of what is meant by curricular reform. To begin with, it is becoming more fruitful to think in terms of interdisci
plinary learning and scholarship than interdisciplinary curricula.
The course is no longer the only unit of interdisciplinary educa
tion. Moreover, interdisciplinary education is aimed at faculty as
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INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES INTO THE 21ST CENTURY 165
much as students. Interdisciplinary structures are also intercon
nected. They are linked in a shifting matrix, replete with feed
back loops and unpredictable synergistic relationships. An inter
disciplinary general education course can yield an insight into a
research problem that leads to the formation of a faculty study group that produces pressure for an interdisciplinary science lab
that strengthens the argument for ties to an inter-university con
sortium that spins off a learning community that develops new
interdisciplinary general education courses, and so on. In this
circumstance, it makes more sense to observe what is actually
happening, identify what faculty and students want to happen, and
facilitate individual activities that seem to move in that direction.
In general, hierarchical command structures need to be replaced
by networks (i.e., connections within a level) and lattices (con nections balanced within and between levels). The development of the resulting teams requires upward/downward and lateral co
ordination skills. No single structural approach or strategy for
change can respond adequately to the multiple logics of a com
plex system.
Impediments
The emergence of complex structures does not mean that disci
plines or departments are disappearing, despite poststructuralist claims to that effect. (Indeed, the reverse may be true: interdisci
plinary study may force disciplines to develop a clearer sense of their distinctive contributions.) Complex human systems typi
cally retain elements of their simple or complicated predecessor structures. Earlier elements will continue to be linked in nonlin
ear, even chaotic, ways to each other and to new elements that
operate by different logics altogether. (See the example below from the University of Rhode Island.) Structural complexity only underscores the growing importance of the discipline, the depart ment, and the major as major sites for educational reform. Nei ther does the emergence of complex structures mean that impedi
ments to interdisciplinary teaching and research have disappeared or will not continue to thwart change. Territoriality and turf battles, status dynamics and disciplinary pecking orders, insecurity and
mistrust, resistance to innovation and lack of integrative skills will continue to impede and inhibit.
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166 THE JOURNAL OF GENERAL EDUCATION
In contrast to the 1960s and 1970s, however, a large literature on interdisciplinary studies is now available. The hard-won les sons of decades of institutional experience are readily available.
This literature spans the history of pertinent approaches and knowl
edge fields, strategies for overcoming barriers, ideas for course
design and program models, and guidelines for assessing teach
ing and learning (Klein and Doty, 1994). Another significant dif
ference is the availability of professional support. The Associa
tion for Integrative Studies acts as a clearinghouse for resources
on the design, implementation, and evaluation of interdisciplinary programs. The Association of American Colleges and Universi
ties sponsors projects and publications that develop and support
integrated approaches to general education and the major. An even
wider network of organizations supports innovations and integra tive approaches to specific disciplinary, professional, and inter
disciplinary domains.
In an environment increasingly characterized by complexity, no single strategy for change is appropriate. Small-scale inter
ventions as well as global interventions to remove obstacles to
faculty interaction will be as appropriate, if not more so, than large scale initiatives. That does not mean large-scale change will not
occur. The changeover to a semester system, institution-wide
general education programs, and major funding for new programs will continue to stimulate campus-wide rethinking and restructur
ing. A recent example of comprehensive rethinking is the strategic
plan proposed by Robert L. Carothers, the President of the Uni
versity of Rhode Island. Citing the need to understand the "multi
disciplinary or trans-disciplinary nature of much of the most im
portant intellectual work being done today" and well as dramatic
budget reductions, Carothers called for a new "post-modern" uni
versity in which faculty and students are organized around inter
disciplinary "partnerships"?a new and better way to think about
the relationships between disciplines"?as well as the more tradi
tional disciplinary colleges. The partnerships or "areas of focus"
proposed for the first five years are for the arts, engineering and
the physical sciences, family and child studies, health promotion, human values, life sciences, marine and coastal environment, and
the state of Rhode Island. The partnership for family and child
studies, for example, would bring "to bear the considerable strength of the URI faculty on the interdisciplinary study of society's cen
tral institution?the family?and [provide] a unique and stimu
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INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES INTO THE 21ST CENTURY 167
lating environment for undergraduate and graduate learning, schol
arly research, and public service." Selected faculty Fellows would
be appointed by the Provost for three-year terms with reduced
teaching loads. "Students would be appointed as Associate Fel
lows, typically at the end of their second year of study...." Carothers saw his proposal as hastening the evolution of the orga nization and culture of colleges, however, not as a substitute for
them (Carothers, 1993, pp. 10-14). More typically, comprehensive change will tend to loosen, rather
than abolish, barriers to interdisciplinary education and research.
Recent institution-wide reports at the Ohio State University, Wayne State University, and the University of British Columbia empha size a multi-layered series of initiatives, not a single approach or
a single site of change (Klein, 1996). At the close of the twentieth century, one particular motivation
for interdisciplinary programming is gaining attention. In the
current climate of economic retrenchment, interdisciplinary stud
ies is being associated with strategies for confronting fiscal aus
terity. Low-enrollment departments can be combined into a single
interdisciplinary department that is economically viable. Faculty in under-enrolled departments can also be shifted from teaching
majors in disciplinary courses to teaching interdisciplinary gen eral education as well as theme- and problem-based inquiry in the
larger curriculum. When these shifts are incorporated into a for
ward-looking institutional plan that faculty and students are in
volved in developing, the strategy may yield viable interdiscipli
nary departments and courses. However, where it is accomplished
by administrative fiat, it is doomed to failure. It is also likely to
fail if interdisciplinarity is not understood. Merely putting people and courses in the same place does not guarantee integrative ap
proaches. If carefully presented, developed, and implemented, however, interdisciplinarity is an effective route to reallocating
faculty resources in a way that is not just fiscally attractive but
educationally and intellectual sound.
Less appreciated is the potential of interdisciplinary thinking to address some of the most controversial issues confronting the
academy. Different perspectives grounded in different assump tions about the world lie at the heart of recent debates over
multiculturalism and the canon. Interdisciplinarity, especially what
Jim Kelly terms elsewhere in this journal "wide interdisciplinarity,"
bridges the gap between conflicting perspectives by providing means of reconciling conflicting insights or pronouncements and
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168 THE JOURNAL OF GENERAL EDUCATION
integrating them into a more comprehensive understanding or so
lution. In a complex system, public debates over the canons can
no longer be usefully construed solely in political terms of con
servatives and radicals or as maneuvering among competing in
terest groups. They are endemic to a system with multiple logics. Intellectual and pragmatic solutions will come only through con
versations across the borders of expertise and greater competence of teachers and learners, administrators and citizens, and faculty in shaping those conversations.
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