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      INTERDISCIPLINARY AND DISCIPLINARY LEARNING IN HIGHER EDUCATION: A DIAGNOSTIC STUDY WITH FOUR ACCREDITED PROGRAMS IN THE SUSTAINABLE BUILT ENVIRONMENT

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          ABSTRACT

          Interdisciplinarity is a critical component of creating a more sustainable built environment and improving student learning outcomes. Yet, learning interdisciplinarity and measuring it in higher education is challenging. This study implemented a diagnostic tool that allowed educators to measure how both disciplinary and interdisciplinary skills, knowledge, and values would grow in courses related to sustainable built environments. One school containing four different disciplines devoted to the built environment, was selected as the study area to collect emprical data. Pre- and post-semester surveys were conducted. Among 286 students, interdisciplinarity grew most among students within the school’s majors, while among students from outside the school majors interdisciplinary learning decreased. Though disciplinary learning outpaces interdisciplinary learning the closer students are to earning their bachelor’s or higher degrees. The result showed that students’ knowledge, values and skills differ depending on the majors, their affiliational context, and the year of classification. The result suggests that the timing of teaching interdisciplinary contents should be earlier.

          The diagnostic tool which measured pre- and post- course disciplinary and interdisciplinary knowledge, skills, and values related to sustainable built environment would also be applicable in other courses in higher education.

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                jgrb
                Journal of Green Building
                College Publishing
                1943-4618
                1552-6100
                Summer 2022
                10 October 2022
                : 17
                : 3
                : 279-294
                Author notes

                1. Professor at TU Darmstadt and Adjunct Professor, Urban and Regional Planning, Michigan State University

                3. Associate Professor, Program Director of Landscape Architecture, School of Planning, Design, & Construction, Michigan State University

                4. Professor, Program Director of Construction Management, School of Planning, Design, & Construction, Michigan State University

                5. PhD. Candidate in Environmental Design, School of Planning, Design, and Construction, Michigan State University

                6. Master in Urban and Regional Planning, School of Planning, Design, and Construction, Michigan State University

                7. PhD candidate at the University of Pennsylvania, Weitzman School of Design.

                2. Professor & Associate Dean, Department of Interior Architecture and Built Environment. College of Human Ecology, Yonsei University, Seoul, Korea (*corresponding author: kimskyu@ 123456yonsei.ac.kr , Tel: 82-2-2123-3140)
                Article
                jgb.17.3.279
                10.3992/jgb.17.3.279
                447fb3ed-1c5e-41ea-8135-cba209d9c07d
                History
                Page count
                Pages: 18
                Categories
                NEW DIRECTIONS IN TEACHING AND RESEARCH

                Urban design & Planning,Civil engineering,Environmental management, Policy & Planning,Architecture,Environmental engineering
                education,built environment,learning,sustainability,Interdisciplinary

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