
How can we measure interdisciplinary learning?
Interdisciplinarity
Sponsored by
Advice for bringing together multiple academic disciplines into one project or approach, examples of interdisciplinary collaboration done well and how to put interdisciplinarity into practice in research, teaching, leadership and impact
You may also like
Interdisciplinarity
Sponsored by
Advice for bringing together multiple academic disciplines into one project or approach, examples of interdisciplinary collaboration done well and how to put interdisciplinarity into practice in research, teaching, leadership and impact
鈥淚 never understood interdisciplinarity. How do you measure the learning?鈥
This was the question that Daniel Seah鈥檚 mentor raised in 2021, when Daniel shared a decision to join the new College of Integrative Studies (CIS) at our university. The mentor began to recount an experience, as an undergraduate in the late 1970s, of being penalised for underplaying macroeconomics in favour of sociology in an essay for an economics and society module.
This misgiving that interdisciplinary learning is hard to quantify is still common. It arises alongside an unmistakable professionalisation of interdisciplinarity (as it establishes foundations that involve specialised faculty and journals, for instance) at Singapore鈥檚 universities; all six autonomous universities in Singapore use the word 鈥渋nterdisciplinary鈥 to describe their courses. So, can we dismiss interdisciplinarity as lacking a quantifiable core when it offers choices that serve our students鈥 professional interests in the long term?
- Spotlight guide: A focus on interdisciplinarity in teaching
- Why we start undergraduate transdisciplinary research from day one
- Building the future: the case for inter-faculty learning
In Singapore, we are entering a decisive phase in our professionalisation of interdisciplinary studies. Our debates must now move beyond what interdisciplinary studies mean and why the approach is necessary. The applied curricula at Singapore鈥檚 universities are focused on real-world problems. Every Singapore university is committed to preparing its graduates for employment .
Our focus now should be to explain how we will conduct 鈥 and measure 鈥 interdisciplinarity in its various forms for undergraduate learning. The goal is to convince employers that a graduate鈥檚 interdisciplinary degree, through integration, gives a compounded advantage to an entry-level employee. To achieve this outcome, we recommend an individualised approach.
Set undergraduates a final-year project
Undergraduates at Singapore Management University are guaranteed a second major. For example, a student pursues a first major in business management with a second major in psychology, alongside pre-assigned core curriculum modules that apply to all undergraduates. This is a familiar form of multidisciplinarity within established assessment structures.
What if we allowed a student (let鈥檚 call her Jane) at an early phase of the degree journey to decide on a final-year project instead? This project is the basis on which Jane selects modules, which coherently integrate Jane鈥檚 core disciplinary expertise with at least one other discipline. These modules provide the academic rigour to support Jane鈥檚 final-year project. The completed project is evidence of interdisciplinarity.
Let鈥檚 say that Jane鈥檚 core disciplinary expertise is sociology. The approved final-year project is a thesis on the cultural narratives of two photojournalists based in the Philippines and Spain, respectively. The project鈥檚 academic focus represents Jane鈥檚 intellectual interests. The thesis component of Jane鈥檚 interdisciplinary journey requires her to enrol in a combination of modules such as arts, culture and management, and the politics of South-east Asia. Jane will also take modules unrelated to sociology or arts management, such as user experience and digital product design.
Faculty supervision of each student
This individualised approach, which receives careful supervision from at least one faculty member per student, is pioneered by the CIS at our university. A committee of faculty members oversees and approves every student鈥檚 proposed combination of modules to ensure meaningful integration to the final-year project. The outcome would be graduates who , having practised self-directed learning from the first day of their undergraduate experience.
Students鈥 project portfolios can evidence their learning
This extent of faculty oversight reflects a distinctive measurement of interdisciplinarity: demonstrating the practical skills of Jane鈥檚 chosen trade to a potential employer. In this case, Jane鈥檚 choice is a career as a UI/UX (user interface/user experience) designer. Apart from the thesis component, Jane must submit an individualised portfolio to show the practical value of the thesis鈥 propositions for an employer of UI/UX designers.
This portfolio will be a website that chronicles the thesis鈥 journey from start to finish. The website will demonstrate, for example, Jane鈥檚 hard skills in Figma, Illustrator, JavaScript, CSS and HTML. The website also proves Jane鈥檚 skills, by reframing the thesis鈥 findings, through photography, user flow, user journey and wireframe. To a UI/UX employer, this portfolio demonstrates the graduate鈥檚 hard and creative skills in narrative design. The portfolio, in turn, is derived from Jane鈥檚 core academic interests in comparative sociology.
A litmus test for value of interdisciplinary learning
This interdisciplinary approach is time-consuming and only viable when student intake is kept low 鈥 at CIS, this is about 50 students per year. The supervising faculties are assigned based on their training in interdisciplinarity. This approach is only one contribution to the professionalisation of interdisciplinary studies in Singapore. A litmus test will be the employers鈥 reception to this approach when our graduates enter the job market.
The misgivings about the evidence of interdisciplinary learning have a provenance that precedes . In the early 1980s, famously debated Thomas Benson鈥檚 polemic on the . This debate galvanised educators to validate their claims of interdisciplinarity through the professionalisation of curricula.
Recently, a graduating computer science student contacted us after the final seminar of a digital law and technological innovations module. 鈥淭hough I might never see you again, I will remember the valuable lessons I learned in your class (and try my best not to be a negligent software engineer),鈥 he said. We had actively explored how legal proximity arises between people involved in the machine-learning life cycle and a victim of negligence. One such person is the software engineer who creates artificial intelligence models as a purely technical and backend task without considering the impact on users.
How might we measure interdisciplinary learning? Here, the answer is clear: a student recognises how the law directly holds her accountable as a software engineer, and also protects her professional interests.
is dean of the College of Integrative Studies and is assistant professor of law (education), both at Singapore Management University.
If you would like advice and insight from academics and university staff delivered direct to your inbox each week, .

