TY - JOUR
T1 - The death of a discipline or the birth of a transdiscipline
T2 - Subverting questions of disciplinarity within Education Studies undergraduate courses
AU - Palaiologou, Ioanna
PY - 2010/7
Y1 - 2010/7
N2 - As non-teacher training courses in UK higher education in Education Studies have grown and developed in recent years they have received enormous interest. All of these Education Studies degrees claim to integrate a number of disciplines using an interdisciplinary or a multidisciplinary paradigm. Traditionally the systematic integration of disciplines within courses has created a range of lenses for focusing upon issues such as in medical sociology and health. However, by their very nature, Education Studies courses are complex and influenced by a number of factors such as the socio-economic climate, political factors, changing technologies and the contemporary views of childhood as well as the changing and evolving socio-constructions of childhood. Currently, Education Studies courses integrate a number of disciplines to investigate the learning process in context. There is a trend for Education Studies degrees to shift between terms of disciplinarity such as multidisciplinarity and interdisciplinarity. This paper examines the nature of Education Studies degrees and tries to provoke the debate about the mono, inter, and multidisciplinarity nature of Education Studies. The paper promulgates that Education Studies by its nature and complexity cannot seek identity with any one of these approaches. It will suggest that, given the complexity of the context it serves to match, that instead Education Studies is embedded within transdisciplinarity.
AB - As non-teacher training courses in UK higher education in Education Studies have grown and developed in recent years they have received enormous interest. All of these Education Studies degrees claim to integrate a number of disciplines using an interdisciplinary or a multidisciplinary paradigm. Traditionally the systematic integration of disciplines within courses has created a range of lenses for focusing upon issues such as in medical sociology and health. However, by their very nature, Education Studies courses are complex and influenced by a number of factors such as the socio-economic climate, political factors, changing technologies and the contemporary views of childhood as well as the changing and evolving socio-constructions of childhood. Currently, Education Studies courses integrate a number of disciplines to investigate the learning process in context. There is a trend for Education Studies degrees to shift between terms of disciplinarity such as multidisciplinarity and interdisciplinarity. This paper examines the nature of Education Studies degrees and tries to provoke the debate about the mono, inter, and multidisciplinarity nature of Education Studies. The paper promulgates that Education Studies by its nature and complexity cannot seek identity with any one of these approaches. It will suggest that, given the complexity of the context it serves to match, that instead Education Studies is embedded within transdisciplinarity.
KW - Discipline
KW - Education studies
KW - Interdisciplinarity
KW - Multi disciplinarity
KW - Notion of education studies
KW - Transdisciplinarity
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=77952894224&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/03055690903220180
DO - 10.1080/03055690903220180
M3 - Article (Academic Journal)
AN - SCOPUS:77952894224
SN - 0305-5698
VL - 36
SP - 269
EP - 282
JO - Educational Studies
JF - Educational Studies
IS - 3
ER -