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Student and Faculty Interdisciplinary Identities in Self-Managed Teams

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TLDR
In this paper, a case study of one interdisciplinary design course from the points of view of faculty and students is presented to understand how students negotiate interdisciplinary identities and how self-managed work teams can be used as a pedagogical strategy for promoting interdisciplinarity.
Abstract
Background Interdisciplinary teamwork is increasingly important for engineering graduates. Yet, the reality of teaching interdisciplinarity requires faculty and students to navigate structures of engineering pro grams that do not accommodate interdisciplinary work. Purpose (Hypothesis) The purpose of this study is to understand how students and faculty negotiate interdisciplinary identities and how self-managed work teams can be used as a pedagogical strategy for promoting interdisciplinarity. Gee's concepts of affinity identity and institutional identity are used to theorize interdisciplinary teaming. Design/Method Multiple data sets from observations and interviews are used to present a case study of one interdisciplinary design course from the points of view of faculty and students. This approach, combined with research literature, is used to propose a pedagogical model for interdisciplinary teaming. Results A pedagogical approach of self-managed teaming can promote interdisciplinary identities if (a) faculty model institutional identities as interdisciplinary researchers and instructors, (b) students are encouraged to perform as decision-makers in groups constructed through affinity identities, and (c) faculty provide scaffolding for self-managed teams and encourage valuing of different disciplinary perspectives. Conclusion In the midst of an international shift toward interdisciplinarity, structural boundaries within academia present challenges to interdisciplinary collaborations. Gee's identity theory can facilitate our understanding of academic structures, especially in examining how overlapping affinity and institutional identities are at the center of newly formed interdisciplinary spaces. Issues critical to aiding interdisciplinary teaming include conflict management, scaffolding by instructors, and realistic appraisal of disciplinary grounding.

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Team Effectiveness Theory from Industrial and Organizational Psychology Applied to Engineering Student Project Teams: A Research Review

TL;DR: In this paper, a review of literature on teams literature from industrial and organizational psychology to engineering education and to identify implications for practice and future directions for research is presented. But this research does not effectively inform engineering education.
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Learning Together: A Collaborative Autoethnographic Exploration of STEAM (STEM + the Arts) Education

TL;DR: In this article, the authors developed an expanded view of how STEAM might enrich engineering education in ways that more closely align with the pedagogical commitments of the arts, drawing on the first two authors' engagement in an interdisciplinary design studio.
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From saying to doing interdisciplinary learning: Is problem-based learning the answer?

TL;DR: In this article, the intentions and principles of interdisciplinary learning and problem-based learning are examined, and three distinct barriers need to be addressed in order to realize the potentials of inter-disciplinary learning in problem based settings.
References
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Book

The art of case study research

TL;DR: In this article, an intensive study of case study research methods is presented, focusing on the Unique Case Research Questions and the Nature of Qualitative Research Data Gathering Analysis and Interpretation Case Researcher Roles Triangulation.
Book

Qualitative research & evaluation methods

TL;DR: In this paper, conceptual issues and themes on qualitative research and evaluaton methods including: qualitative data, triangulated inquiry, qualitative inquiry, constructivism, constructionism, complexity (chaos) theory, qualitative designs and data collection, fieldwork strategies, interviewing, tape-recording, ethical issues, analysis, interpretation and reporting, observations vs. perceived impacts and utilisation-focused evaluation reporting.
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