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Interdisciplinary environmental education: elements of field identity and curriculum design

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TLDR
In this paper, a national survey was conducted of program administrators to investigate their programs and identify their views of what an ideal curriculum would entail, finding that consensus exists on field identity: an applied, interdisciplinary focus on the interface of coupled human-natural systems with a normative commitment to sustainability.
Abstract
Interdisciplinary environmental degree programs (environmental studies/science(s) and similar programs) in higher education in the U.S.A. are both diverse and dynamic in their curriculum designs. Though these characteristics afford flexibility and adaptability, they are also seen as weaknesses that can undermine programs’ perceived legitimacy both within and beyond their host institutions. The lack of a clear identity, definition of core competencies, and prescriptions for interdisciplinary pedagogy can create confusion among program stakeholders and skepticism among institutional administrators. To learn more about how interdisciplinary environmental curricula vary across the U.S.A., a national survey was conducted of program administrators to investigate their programs and identify their views of what an ideal curriculum would entail. The study demonstrates that consensus exists on field identity: an applied, interdisciplinary focus on the interface of coupled human-natural systems with a normative commitment to sustainability. The study also reveals that three ideal curricular models are espoused by these administrators: Systems Science, Policy and Governance, and Adaptive Management. Program attributes related to these models are also reported. We conclude the article with a brief description of how the three models are related to developing an interdisciplinary environmental workforce, describe the potential next steps for extending the study, and express our optimism that a consensus can be forged on core competencies guidelines and model-specific recommendations for curricular content related to three broad knowledge areas and two skill sets.

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The Elusive Pursuit of Interdisciplinarity at the Human—Environment Interface

TL;DR: The respondents identified many advantages and rewards of interdisciplinary research, including the creation of more-relevant knowledge, but reported significant challenges and obstacles, including tension with departments or institutions, communication difficulties, and differing disciplinary approaches.
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The Role of SoTL in the Academy: Upon the 25th Anniversary of Boyer’s Scholarship Reconsidered

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The global sustainability transition: it is more than changing light bulbs

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Using a Delphi study to clarify the landscape and core outcomes in environmental education

TL;DR: When leaders in a field agree upon core outcomes for the field, connection, reinforcement, and a shared vision of change are synergistically strengthened as discussed by the authors, even when the field is dynamic.
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Beyond Traditional Measures of STEM Success: Long-Term Predictors of Social Agency and Conducting Research for Social Change

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used frameworks of undergraduate socialization as well as social justice perspectives in STEM education to examine the undergraduate experiences and institutional contexts that predict STEM bachelor's degree recipients' development of two democratic educational outcomes seven years after college entry: social agency and values toward conducting research that will have a meaningful impact on underserved communities.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Entering the Century of the Environment: A New Social Contract for Science

TL;DR: The concept of what constitutes "the environment" is changing rapidly as mentioned in this paper, and urgent and unprecedented environmental and social changes challenge scientists to define a new social contract, which represents a commitment on the part of all scientists to devote their energies and talents to the most pressing problems of the day, in proportion to their importance.
BookDOI

Handbook of transdisciplinary research

TL;DR: The Emergence of Transdisciplinarity as a Form of Research is discussed in this article, where the authors present a survey of transdisciplinary research in the field of sustainable development.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sustainability and resilience: toward a systems approach

TL;DR: A comprehensive systems approach is essential for effective decision-making with regard to global sustainability, since industrial, social, and ecological systems are closely linked as discussed by the authors, recognizing that steady-state sustainability models are simplistic.
Journal ArticleDOI

Logics of interdisciplinarity

TL;DR: In this paper, an eighteen-month empirical study of three interdisciplinary fields that cross the boundaries between the natural sciences or engineering, on the one hand, and the social sciences or arts on the other, is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Interdisciplinarity: A Critical Assessment

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a cross-sectional view of interdisciplinary communication, knowledge diffusion, research assessment, and interdisciplinary research centers, and provide historical perspectives on the disciplinary system, interdiscipline formation, applied and professional fields, and institutional fragmentation.
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