导航跨学科:谈判纪律,体现,和实质性的领域方法培训课程

Rebecca Rotter, L. Jeffery, L. Heslop
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摘要

本文阐述了跨学科合作教学中的一些机遇和挑战,并结合我们作为人类学方法讲师和海洋生态学和地貌学方法研究培训课程荣誉学生的参与观察。我们认为,跨学科方法培训为教育工作者提供了自我反思的机会,认识到我们知识中理所当然的方面,并改善了我们工作的价值与他人的沟通。然而,我们也展示了课程结构的决定如何强化学科边界,限制知识间的知识生产;一种认识论方法如何掩盖其他方法,阻碍跨学科学习;方法训练如何涉及隐性和具体化的知识以及对物质方法的掌握,需要重复和实验。我们提供的见解,如何我们作为教育工作者可以提高我们的沟通人类学的价值和它的方法。首先,任何学科的教师都应该意识到他们的隐性知识是如何影响教学过程的。其次,与其要求教师教授各种方法,不如让教师在与其他学科的对话和合作中教授自己的专业领域,这可能更有益。第三,跨学科的课程必须精心规划,以允许不同学科的平等参与,以便从一开始就以自己的方式理解人类学并融入课程。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Navigating interdisciplinarity: negotiating discipline, embodiment, and materiality on a field methods training course
This article elucidates some of the opportunities and challenges of interdisciplinary collaboration in teaching, drawing on our participant observation as both instructors of anthropological methods and honorary students of marine ecology and geomorphology methods on a research training field course. We argue that interdisciplinary methods training offers educators opportunities for self-reflexivity, recognition of the taken-for-granted aspects of our knowledge, and improved communication of the value of our work to others. However, we also show how decisions about course structure can reinforce disciplinary boundaries, limiting inter-epistemic knowledge production; how one epistemological approach may overshadow others, hindering interdisciplinary learning; and how methods training involves tacit and embodied knowledge and mastery of material methods, requiring repetition and experimentation. We offer insights into how we as educators can improve our communication of the value of anthropology and its methods. First, instructors in any discipline should develop an awareness of how their tacit knowledge affects the pedagogical process. Second, instead of enskilling instructors to teach a variety of methods, it may be more beneficial for instructors to teach their own areas of expertise, in dialogue and collaboration with other disciplines. Third, interdisciplinary courses must be carefully planned to allow equal participation of different disciplines, so that anthropology is understood on its own terms and embedded in the course from the outset.
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