“Undisciplining” Higher Education without Losing Disciplines:: Furthering Transformative Potential for Students

Publication date

2023

Authors

Vereijken, MaykeISNI 0000000465118886
Akkerman, S.ISNI 000000004682521X
te Pas, SusanISNI 0000000392260792
van der Tuin, IrisISNI 0000000118860912
Kluijtmans, Manon

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by_nc_nd

Abstract

In universities worldwide, there has been a movement away from mono-disciplinary towards multi-, inter- and transdisciplinary education, motivated by the notion that complex societal issues call for more than a single disciplinary perspective. To prepare students for a role in addressing these issues, flexibility within educational programs is needed for students to move within, across and beyond disciplines. Contrary to the intended orientation on societal issues, multi-, inter- and transdisciplinary education appear in the current discourse regularly as aims in themselves, as if they were distinctive types of education that one should adopt at the level of a course or a program. We argue that education could more flexibly utilize and create free space: continuously questioning, also together with students, what sorts of perspectives and disciplinarities problems require. Therefore, we propose boundary crossing as an alternative way of thinking about multi-, inter- and transdisciplinary education. At many universities, organizing for flexibility already gains some traction. However, we believe that a shift of focus towards more open ways of transgressing disciplines in the field of higher education is vital for furthering the transformative potential of multi-, inter- and transdisciplinarity for students to being and becoming the professionals that society needs.

Keywords

Higher education, boundary crossing, interdisciplinary education, multidisciplinary education, transdisciplinary education, Education

Citation

Vereijken, M, Akkerman, S, te Pas, S, van der Tuin, I & Kluijtmans, M 2023, '“Undisciplining” Higher Education without Losing Disciplines: Furthering Transformative Potential for Students', Higher Education Research and Development, vol. 42, no. 7, pp. 1762-1775. https://doi.org/10.1080/07294360.2022.2156482