Sheridan Center for Teaching and Learning workshop on Interdisciplinary teaching at the occasion of Sheridan Center's 20th anniversary conference on Saturday November 3. Sue Alcock and Ömür Harmansah.
Interdisciplinarity
- Abandoning established "authoritative disciplinary canons"; dissolving disciplinary walls, interrogating disciplinary geneaologies and opening fields to supra-disciplinary/post-disciplinary discourses.
- Speaking to non-disciplinary fields, fields of research that are cross-cutting multiple disciplines, such as visual culture studies, science studies, material culture studies, cultural studies, ethnohistory.
- Working with cross-disciplinary concepts like representation, space, body, technology, agency, ideology, gender etc., abandoning the disciplinary "jargons" hostile to cross-disciplinary dialogue.
- Teaching thematic courses that bring interdisciplinary discourses and fields into classroom, rather than strictly chronological "surveys" of canonical material.
- Reading assignments outside disciplinary norms: actually, readings that deconstruct those norms, even better! (i.e. assigning Michel Foucault whenever possible).
- Collaborative teaching: good and bad examples.
- Artist visits to archaeology classes at Reed College.
- Course wikis, creative assignments and Project-based learning.
- Ethnography of space and place at Reed College campus
Resources

Michel Foucault (285 rue de Vaugirard, Paris, 1975), who interrogated disciplinary geneaologies in the social sciences and humanities. Image Source.
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