Interdisciplinary students’ reflections on the development of their epistemic fluency

Publication date

2023

Authors

van Goch, MerelISNI 0000000419470635

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by

Abstract

Introduction: How can higher education institutions foster students’ epistemic fluency, that is, their ability to identify, reflect upon, and connect different knowledges and different ways of knowing? As higher education institutions put interdisciplinary research and education prominently on their strategic agendas, there is a call for knowledge on how to teach students to identify and integrate insights from different disciplines. This study approached this topic from the viewpoint of the student: what are the drivers and barriers to the development of epistemic fluency, according to interdisciplinary students? Methods: Participants were undergraduate students enrolled in a course on the interdisciplinary research process with a specific emphasis on integration. In the first and last lectures of the course, students were asked to reflect on their openness to alternative perspectives and their connective thinking. They also reflected on their development in general and specifically in this interdisciplinary course. Results: Students were able to meaningfully reflect on their development and the results showed a varied picture of students’ epistemic fluency.

Keywords

connective thinking, multiple perspectives, epistemic fluency, integrative competences, interdisciplinarity, higher education, reflection, modes of knowledge

Citation

van Goch, M 2023, 'Interdisciplinary students’ reflections on the development of their epistemic fluency', Frontiers in Education, vol. 8, 1145227, pp. 1-10. https://doi.org/10.3389/feduc.2023.1145227