Pkal-keck-webinar
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Computational and Multidisciplinary Curriculum and Research Initiative
- Supported by the W. M. Keck Foundation
- Mike Deibel and Charlie Peck (deibemi at earlham.edu, charliep at cs.earlham.edu)
- Earlham College, Richmond Indiana
- Summer research projects and course modules with computational aspects across a wide variety of science disciplines
A. Our work was facilitated by
- Regular and established multidisciplinary meetings/communication (SciFri, SciDiv)
- Project of interest to the campus and off-campus communities and interest to students
- Project intentionally chosen to be as multidisciplinary as possible (approach and process)
B. Barriers which we experienced
- Lack of time in faculty and student schedules for new initiatives
- Staffing limitations at small schools, small departments have less inherit flexibility.
- Disciplines sometimes speak different "languages"
- Students often like to compartmentalize their education
C. Strategies and tactics for overcoming the barriers
- Regular face-to-face meetings and lots of electronic communication
- Creativity and adaptability of faculty
- Common presentation material or guest presentations of material for courses and research
- Shared field work, shared meals
D. Assessment
- External evaluation, on-site visits
- Internal surveys
- Personal analysis and reflections by faculty each year
- Exam questions (criterion referenced assessment)
E. Sustainability of multidisciplinary work
- Course module vs. separate course
- Service learning - outside of a course or built into course
- Involving pre-tenure faculty