Rethinking Traditional Discipline

2022 ◽  
pp. 223-232
2001 ◽  
Vol 40 (02) ◽  
pp. 78-82 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Hasman ◽  
H. P. A. Boshuizen

AbstractProblem-based learning (PBL) is an educational method that can be considered as an alternative to the traditional, discipline-based, approach to teaching. In this paper the characteristics of both approaches are discussed and compared. Some background knowledge concerning the principles that determine the success of instructional methods is presented. Finally, it is discussed how medical informatics can be taught in a PBL environment.


Author(s):  
Gregory Heath

This chapter investigates how the modernised university might be transformed by the wider adoption of Mode-2 knowledge production. Mode-2 knowledge production, production of dispersed, team-based knowledge, as distinct from the traditional discipline-based Mode-1 knowledge production, was first identified and discussed by Gibbons et al. in 1994. Since then, the terminology has found its way into more general discourse about research and teaching and learning, but in that discourse, Mode-2 knowledge production has struggled to find the legitimacy and acceptance accorded to Mode-1. This is in spite of the fact that knowledge today is most often produced in collaboration, is transmitted in multi-mediated modalities, and utilised in transformative ways very often not envisioned by the generators of that knowledge. It is argued that the reason for the lack of acceptance lies in the fact that a supporting epistemology for Mode-2 knowledge has not, to date, been adequately developed. Thus, the chapter proposes that an epistemology based in philosophical or “American” pragmatism founded by Charles Sanders Peirce can be adopted to provide an articulated and well-grounded epistemology to support Mode-2 as a legitimate form of knowledge production.


2013 ◽  
Vol 4 ◽  
pp. 21-25 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steve Wolverton

Ethnobiology 5 stems from Eugene Hunn’s four phases of the history of ethnobiology and focuses on the relevance of ethnobiological research in the context of environmental and cultural change.  It refers to a contemporary phase of the field’s historical development.  In this paper, I argue that ethnobiology is preadapted to be a scholarly umbrella for a number of disciplines that concern human-environment interactions, suggesting that one goal of Ethnobiology 5 is to bridge traditional academic boundaries in order to broaden the community of ethnobiologists. Another goal of Ethnobiology 5 is to capitalize on and communicate the relevance of ethnobiological scholarship for solving problems related to contemporary environmental and cultural crises.  Indeed, ethnobiology is not a subfield of any traditional discipline and by the nature of its name bridges humanities, social science, and science.  Ethnobiology has always been interdisciplinary in terms of its subject matter, yet its community of scholars is relatively small compared to mission-driven disciplines, such as conservation biology.  Venues for publication and presentation of ethnobiological research, as well as how ethnobiologists portray their research, are critical to growing ethnobiology.


2006 ◽  
Vol 28 (2) ◽  
pp. 28-30 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chris Toumey

My background in cultural anthropology has brought me to a situation where I work with an interdisciplinary research team studying societal interactions with nanotechnology. Our work benefits from the distinctive disciplinary backgrounds of its members, but it is seldom necessary to credit a particular idea or project to one traditional discipline or another. We borrow freely from each other's backgrounds, and this kind of synergy contributes greatly to the success of our work. Much of what I do, for example, is not specific to anthropology. In fact I sometimes find that people who read my articles on nanotechnology are surprised to find that I am an anthropologist.


10.12737/1465 ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 1 (5) ◽  
pp. 52-59
Author(s):  
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Nikolay Sosnin

The issues associated with the geometrical and graphics training contents for the competence-based model of engineering higher education are discusses. Inconsistencies in the process of curricula projecting arising as a result of transfer from the traditional discipline-based to the innovative competence-based education model are analyzed. It is concluded that the old education model does not fit with the new educational goals to bring up students with a set of needed competences. Principles and rules for designing the educational content structure suitable for a competencebased model are outlined. It is proposed to develop the design and engineering competences based on geometrical modeling on the basis of sequential-staged structure. That methodology should be preferred, instructs the author, which allows to lift the building-of-projecting-competences activities at the over-disciplinary and highly integrative level.


2015 ◽  
Vol 156 (17) ◽  
pp. 698-705
Author(s):  
Zoltán Bánsághi

Infiltrating many traditional discipline, interventional radiology achieved a dynamic progress during the last 50 years. Collaboration with the modern, personalised, quality-sensitive oncology opened a blooming new horizon of oncointervention in the early 1980s. This complex field needs pluripotent skills and broadened view from the interventional radiologist. The aim of this paper is to summarize the „menu” of present and near-future therapeutic tools of oncointerventional radiology. Orv. Hetil., 2015, 156(17), 698–705.


2000 ◽  
Vol 24 (2-3) ◽  
pp. 60-73 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chris Timothy J. Lewis

Schools today are faced with an increase in problem behavior. Behavioral challenges often take extreme forms such as violence and aggression toward teachers and students. Even minor behaviors such as non-compliance are becoming chronic to the point of limiting educator’s ability to effectively teach. For a myriad of reasons, traditional “discipline” procedures are not effective in re-directing students toward more appropriate behavior. This article outlines and describes features of an alternative model that encourages educators to move from a reactive, consequent based system of behavior management to a pro-active instructionally focused system. Examples from on-going research with schools who are currently implementing systems of Effective Behavioral Support (EBS) are also provided.


Author(s):  
Ayub Ayub

For centuries, Muslim community has taken ‘ulūm al-ḥadīth for granted as a valid method in hadith verification; if a hadith is declared as an authentic hadith after examined using the method, then they will accept the hadith as an authentic one. Nevertheless, the traditional discipline has been criticised by various modern scholars who argue that traditional ‘ulūm alḥadīth is not a sufficient method to evaluate the authenticity of hadith reports. One of their reasons is that the traditional hadith criticism only examines the chain of narrations (sanad) of hadith reports and ignores the content (matn) of the hadith. This essay will discuss the role of matn criticism in the authentication of hadith; whether it is included in the traditional method of ‘ulūm al-ḥadīth or not, and if so, what is the criteria and how the scholars apply them.


2022 ◽  
pp. 192-207
Author(s):  
Alyssa Lee Mick

For decades, public schools in the United States have employed retributive discipline systems that rely heavily on exclusion as a primary means to mete punishment. More recently, some schools have begun employing restorative practices which encourage relationship-building, healing, learning, and collaboration before, during, and after discipline events. Used proactively as a means to build a culture of caring and support, restorative circles foster communication and relationship-building among school stakeholders, but restorative conferences and circles may also be used in lieu of exclusion as alternatives to traditional discipline models. Advocates of restorative justice assert that recidivism is reduced through purposeful community-building processes espoused by RJ principles.


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