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What Are Interdisciplinary Studies?
Interdisciplinary Degrees
Interdisciplinary Studies & Career Prep
Examples of Interdisciplinary Programs
Are Interdisciplinary Studies for You?
Educational Benefits
Advantages and Disadvantages
Interdisciplinary studies offer a novel alternative for structuring your academic journey through college. But what exactly are interdisciplinary studies? Interdisciplinary studies combine coursework across two or more disciplines within an approach organized around a well-defined learning focus that straddles more than one discipline.
Aimed at high school students making plans for college, this post explains what interdisciplinary studies are all about and explores and demystifies how these programs work — in all their variety and flexibility. We’ll also help you decide if this approach is right for you, list some of the pros and cons, and explain which students typically get the most benefits and why. So buckle in, you’re about to become an interdisciplinary studies expert!
If you’re on the path to choosing a college major, you have lots of options in front of you.
While most students jump into college with a plan to study one specific discipline as a major and degree track, others like the idea of getting a well-rounded education above all, pursuing a liberal arts approach for example.
Many students don't think about a third option, a kind of middle way called interdisciplinary studies.
So... before you go down the more traditional pathways, it's a smart move to understand what interdisciplinary studies are in college, how these programs work, and if the approach is right for you.
In this post, we’ll explore several key facets of interdisciplinary studies — all important for your college planning and decision making, including:
You may not be completely ready to decide today if an interdisciplinary approach is right for you, but you’re about to have a much better and broader understanding to guide your next steps!
While it’s so common for students to pick a major and get a degree aligned with a single discipline, it’s easy to completely overlook an important, intriguing alternative — taking an interdisciplinary studies approach.
Instead of using a specific subject matter to guide your course selections, such as math courses for math majors, engineering courses for engineering majors, or literature and linguistics courses for English majors, and so on... you’ll purposefully take courses in different disciplines — hence the term interdisciplinary . This approach allows you to expand, enrich, and deepen your understanding of a specific concept, problem, or theme by drawing on and applying insights, frameworks, and methodologies from a number of relevant, overlapping perspectives.
For example, let's imagine a student aspires to work in the field of art therapy — both as a therapist and researcher/writer. The student could get a degree in psychology and build a foundation that way, before going on to do professional studies or other graduate studies program.
But, the student could opt for an interdisciplinary approach instead — and craft a learning pathway that combines highly relevant courses from multiple disciplines, such as psychology, art, esthetics (a branch of philosophy), and possibly also education and art history.
Interdisciplinary studies is an academic approach where you take courses and study concepts from different disciplines. While almost all degree programs involve some interdisciplinary components, in the way physics programs involve math skills, for example, interdisciplinary studies aren’t just about having background knowledge from a related discipline. This approach is about intellectual curiosity and holistic perspectives that offer a creative approach for the study of complex issues or problems impacted by a variety of factors and influences — drawing on key principles and concepts that belong to entirely different disciplines, hence the term inter-disciplinary.
Seems simple enough, but it's worth remembering that there are varying degrees of interdisciplinary study going on in traditional degree programs too, so the distinctions are not always black and white.
While a physics degree requires background knowledge in mathematics, it’s not considered interdisciplinary in academia because physics concepts are fundamentally intertwined with math formulas, in the same way reading is intrinsic to studying history.
By comparison, a student interested in studying the impact of religious beliefs and culture on social attitudes about gender is clearly on an interdisciplinary path. A specialized degree track in just one discipline alone — either theology, or sociology, or gender studies — wouldn't allow you to fully investigate this kind of topic. Likewise, a liberal arts approach requires lots of inclusive coursework, much of which would fall outside the well-defined academic inquiry focused on dissecting interconnections between religion and gender.
This is where an interdisciplinary approach is key: while it won’t provide the same level of expertise in any single discipline, it allows you to integrate courses, concepts, and knowledge across distinct but relevant disciplines.
But wait… What degree would the student earn?... In this case, maybe it would be a bachelor of arts degree in Gender and Theology Studies! Get the idea?...
Yes, they are different, even though both involve a study design that includes courses from multiple disciplines.
As we've mentioned, an interdisciplinary study design aligns specific and relevant courses around a well defined topic of study or inquiry, or to prepare a student for a multifaceted career role.
Liberal Arts programs are anchored in social science and humanities courses and the academic goal is to finish college versed in a broad foundation of core social and cultural concepts and understandings.
While some interdisciplinary tracks might also involve humanities and social science courses, others will mix humanities and technology, or linguistics and statistics, and so forth, depending on the area of inquiry or career profile the student is focused on.
Yes, and no...
If students pursue dual degrees or a double major in order to gain insights into a well defined topic of inquiry or well-defined skill set that straddles two or three different disciplines, then this is, yes, very much akin to interdisciplinary studies. This means that in some contexts the terms are nearly interchangeable.
However, many students pursue dual degrees and and double majors primarily to leave college with a broader set of qualifications, not necessarily to integrate diverse methods and perspectives for purposeful inquiry. Therefore, the course design is broad and inclusive, focused on taking enough courses in each discipline to major in or get a degree in each discipline.
Students in interdisciplinary studies may cast aside some key requirements or core courses however, because their focus is often on digging deeply into the courses that are most relevant to a specific interdisciplinary focus, be it for inquiry or for building a uniquely defined career profile, or both.
Compared to the simple logic of a traditional degree where a student studies engineering to get an engineering degree, an interdisciplinary approach can be more slippery and confusing, at least at first...
The fact is interdisciplinary degree programs can take lots of forms.
For example, some schools allow students to create their own interdisciplinary degree programs, with the student working with an academic advisor or other relevant faculty to design the course and capstone requirements as well!
However, you can also find established interdisciplinary degree programs offered from year to year — already having an approved curriculum and credit requirements — similar to and alongside traditional degree offerings.
Finally, remember that some popular, well-established degree programs are also inherently “interdisciplinary” because they plainly involve coursework across diverse and distinct disciplines. Some examples include:
African American Studies
Media Studies
Art Therapy
Political Economy
Science Writing
Health Management
Communications
Urban Planning
Data Science
Because degrees like these are so prevalent, academia tends to lump them in with traditional degrees, despite their interdisciplinary features. In other words, when people think of interdisciplinary degree tracks it is often programs that are a bit more edgy and trendy that come to mind, such as Religion and Ecology (a degree track at Yale), or Modern Culture and Media (at Brown).
Many people assume interdisciplinary studies will involve something edgy and trendy, such as Yale's Religion and Ecology program, or Brown's popular Modern Culture and Media Studies track. However, some interdisciplinary degree tracks are hiding in plain sight, such as Urban Planning, Data Science, Education Technology, or Political Economy...
As we’ve mentioned, many schools even offer you the freedom to propose and craft your own personalized interdisciplinary degree track. (Isn't that cool?)
This is where things can get really creative... But how does this work?...
These individualized interdisciplinary study programs typically involve an academic contract or proposal that takes shape after you’re admitted and enrolled.
It's important to realize that you yourself will make the proposal, albeit with the support of a designated academic advisor and following an established university process.
This often involves three principal steps:
Here’s how Vanderbilt University describes the steps you’d take to do this:
Study the course catalogue
Prepare a tentative list of courses to include in your interdisciplinary major
Write up a draft of your rationale for this major and curriculum design
Review your proposed courses, major, and rationale with your faculty advisor
Get the advisor’s final approval and signature and submit the required forms to the Office of Undergraduate Education
This is a very flexible and creative approach, as you can now see! What would your interdisciplinary major be if you were going to create a proposal like this?
Here are some possibilities to give you an idea how creative and flexible this approach can be:
Music & Neuroscience
Sports Psychology
Religion and Nationalism
Private Media and Free Speech
Gender Studies & Theology
Sacred Art & Music
Yes. Many graduate students pursue interdisciplinary studies in graduate school, and many graduate schools — including the very best ones at Ivy League schools and other very selective programs — support robust interdisciplinary degree programs. This is true for both academic and professional programs at both the master's degree and doctoral degree levels.
An interdisciplinary approach is not adapted to preparing you for a career in the same way that specializing in a single discipline does, but it can have its own merits career wise.
Multi-Modal Thinking
Students who take an interdisciplinary approach can develop more fluid and flexible ways of thinking, analysis, and problem solving.
Mastering & Navigating Complexity
And, just as specialization can translate into opportunities professionally, interdisciplinary studies can enhance critical thinking, creativity, and adaptability — skills that can also prepare you for complex roles and challenges and help you succeed in navigating issues, research designs, organizations, or systems fraught with multifaceted complexity.
A More Holistic Knowledge Base
Interdisciplinary studies offer a valuable alternative for students envisioning a career role that doesn't align well with a more specialized degree program, offering a more holistic approach instead.
For example, to be an effective change leader in a struggling urban school district you'd need to be able to contend with lots of interconnected and nuanced social and managerial dynamics! A degree in public administration alone might not fit that bill, as you can imagine. Instead you might want to take leadership and management courses, while also getting some grounding in cultural studies, sociology, and organizational psychology.
Now you have a better general understanding of what interdisciplinary studies entail, but what better way to grasp the idea more fully than to look at some real examples.
The following list will help you see just how academically diverse interdisciplinary study programs can be — and we hope it inspires you to discover what might be an interdisciplinary impulse of your own you haven't fully explored!
The examples below see a wide range of existing degree tracks offered at top schools. Note: some of the programs listed below are designated by the host school as dual degree or joint degree programs.
Interdisciplinary Study Track | School |
---|---|
Environmental Economics and Policy | UC Berkeley |
Operations Research and Management Science | UC Berkeley |
Science, Technology & Society | Stanford |
Human Computer Interaction | Stanford |
History and Philosophy of Science and Technology | Stanford |
Earth Systems | Stanford |
Peace Studies | Purdue |
Pre-Medical Engineering Studies | Purdue |
Computational Biology | Brown |
Computer Science-Economics | Brown |
Modern Culture & Media | Brown |
Religion and Ecology | Yale |
Environment, Economics, and Politics | Claremont McKenna College |
Ancient Religion & Society (Religious Studies & Classics) | Duke University |
Linguistics and Computer Science | Duke University |
Interdisciplinary Studies in Social Science | University of Michigan |
Cognitive Science | Cornell University |
Native American and Indigenous Studies | Barnard College |
Feminist/Intersectional Science and Technology | Barnard College |
Interdepartmental Program for Neuroscience | UCLA |
If you’ve gotten this far and the question Are interdisciplinary studies right for me? is tugging at you, here are two very simple but powerful ways to gain some better self knowledge on this point...
What you’ll need
What to do
What to ask yourself
Review your list: ask yourself the following questions…
Assessing your inclinations
Which broad grouping do you think you’re leaning toward:
Another way to test if an interdisciplinary approach might be right for you, is through the lens of your career goals.
Let’s say you want to be a statistician. Most of the classes you’d need to succeed would fall under one discipline, mathematics, indicating little motivation to take an interdisciplinary approach.
However, if you wanted to be an epidemiologist, then you could follow a mathematics pathway and wait to learn more about medicine and epidemiology in graduate school.
Or, you could create an interdisciplinary approach, studying key concepts from two or three distinct disciplines — across mathematics along with life sciences or public health.
Let’s say you want to be an environmental policy research analyst. You’d probably see your course requirements crisscrossing two or three distinct disciplines:
There are many potential educational benefits of interdisciplinary studies. Two that are most distinctive in my opinion include personalization, and tackling complexity.
Personalization
One key educational benefit of interdisciplinary studies is the ability to break free of traditional academic silos — disciplines and departments — to pursue an education that’s better aligned with specific individual interests or career goals.
Tackling Complexity
From globalization to global organizations and global communications, to the ethical challenges in a world of accelerating technological innovation and disruptions — just to pick a few examples! — we live and work in a world fraught with layers of interconnected complexity and rapid-fire change.
A rigorous, purposeful, and well designed interdisciplinary studies program can equip you to think across intersecting disciplines and apply different modes of thinking and problem solving for navigating complex issues or exercising leadership in complex settings or organizations.
Critical Thinking
Communication Skills
Application of Knowledge / Problem Solving
Now that we’ve explored many facets of interdisciplinary studies, we want to give you a quick, ready-made decision-making matrix to help you weigh the pros and cons of an interdisciplinary studies approach.
Advantages | Disadvantages |
---|---|
Holistic understanding that can lead to deeper understanding, especially for more complex issues or problems | Less opportunity to achieve more advanced level mastery within a single discipline, making understanding within individual disciplines more superficial, sacrificing deeper expertise |
Offers more flexibility when making course selections and combinations, for a more tailored, personalized learning experience | Can present distinct academic and intellectual challenges related to connecting the dots and forging a coherent line of inquiry as you take courses in diverse disciplines |
Helps you prepare for a professional future that involves complex systems, issues, and problem solving and for careers that span core disciplines, such as ethics and technology or environmental policymaking | May give future employers or prospective graduate schools concerns about academic rigor, worried that your interdisciplinary degree doesn’t provide enough focus, coherence, and specialization |
For students with diverse interests, an interdisciplinary track can boost engagement and offer a more intellectually vibrant educational experience | You may find that taking an interdisciplinary path requires more individual initiative, presents unique academic advising and planning challenges, or has less built-in institutional support, compared to traditional degree tracks |
Interdisciplinary studies offer a unique and enriching educational path — and a middle way —for students eager to explore the intersections of various fields. When aligned with a student’s passion for a specific focus of inquiry, or a particular career goal, or as a foundation for tackling complex, multifaceted issues and systems, this approach can be quite powerful.
Therefore, any decision about choosing an interdisciplinary track should be approached with clarity of purpose and meaningful consideration, including seeking feedback from experienced academic advisors and college counselors.
It also means being sure to explore and assess your own goals, interests, and aspirations thoroughly.
If you want a trustworthy guide for your decision making and you’re not already in the Crimson network, then reach out to us today.
It’s easy.
Just schedule a free feedback session. We can’t wait to hear about your journey, offer some valuable tips, and help you feel confident you’re set to aim as high as possible! (It’s what we're here for.)
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