Undergraduate Course: Reflections on Interdisciplinary Practice 3: Comparing and Critiquing (EFIE09001)
Course Outline
School | Edinburgh Futures Institute |
College | College of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences |
Credit level (Normal year taken) | SCQF Level 9 (Year 3 Undergraduate) |
Availability | Not available to visiting students |
SCQF Credits | 20 |
ECTS Credits | 10 |
Summary | In this course you will critique and compare different approaches used for reflecting on and growing in interdisciplinary practice, helping you deepening your confidence and capacity for independently and flexibly working in interdisciplinary contexts. You will utilise your knowledge and experience in supporting juniors and peers in their development as interdisciplinary practitioners. Topics will include mentoring theories and techniques, enterprise and standard setting, and theories of interdisciplinarity including thinking in systems. |
Course description |
In your third year of study, this course supports you in further developing the independence and critical insight needed to successfully complete the honours level of this interdisciplinary programme and your work towards becoming an Interdisciplinary Practitioner. This includes the introduction of new insight frameworks at higher level. For example, a spotlight on Systems Thinking will help you deepen your understanding and put into perspective what you have learned about systems maps and diagrams in year 2, allowing you to evaluate is usefulness in exploring complex problems. You will continue to learn about and practice ways of communicating in an open and respectful manner with diverse groups of people. Continued regular reflections will help you integrate your learning from across the whole programme, and to trace your own progress toward the programme learning outcomes as well as your individual goals. During this process you will be able to identify any gaps in your learning or skills that you may still have to fill to prepare you for the final year of your studies, including to start and successfully undertake the work on the capstone
Building on the work you have done on assessment literacy in second year, you will explore how assessment structures drive learning and behaviour, through setting and tracing of standards and performance indicators or measurements of success, in education settings (marking rubrics) but also beyond. You will be able to put this into practice in aid of your own personal development but also, in further development of peer support skills, in helping other students: you may start mentoring students from the new incoming cohorts, helping them in their transition through the early years of their studies.
Student Learning Experience:
This course consists of two parts: firstly, a series of lectures with some panel discussions or practical demonstrations thrown in as well. In these lectures, all students from the programme, across all year groups, come together. And secondly, weekly two-hour interactive seminars, or workshops, that will contain a mix of activities including presentations, practical exercises and activities with peers as well as time and space for writing and individual reflections. You will learn alongside your peers from your own year group in these sessions. They are structured around a series of separate thematic blocks linked to the Lecture series, Life Design, and Systems Thinking, each offering its own, specific approach to supporting you in becoming an interdisciplinary practitioner.
All timetabled classes - both lectures and seminars/workshops - will take place in person. The attendance at the classes is compulsory. There may be some recorded content or slides that can be shared after the sessions, but key learning experiences will be offered in class only, and all students are expected to attend all sessions.
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Entry Requirements (not applicable to Visiting Students)
Pre-requisites |
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Co-requisites | |
Prohibited Combinations | |
Other requirements | None |
Course Delivery Information
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Academic year 2025/26, Not available to visiting students (SS1)
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Quota: None |
Course Start |
Full Year |
Timetable |
Timetable |
Learning and Teaching activities (Further Info) |
Total Hours:
200
(
Seminar/Tutorial Hours 66,
Programme Level Learning and Teaching Hours 4,
Directed Learning and Independent Learning Hours
130 )
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Assessment (Further Info) |
Written Exam
0 %,
Coursework
100 %,
Practical Exam
0 %
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Additional Information (Assessment) |
Reflective Submissions (4 formative outputs equivalent to 500-1000 words each, 2 summative outputs equivalent to ~1500 words each worth 30% and 70% of the final course mark respectively)
Students are required to submit a series of reflective outputs detailing the exploration of Knowledge Creation and accompanying Personal Growth, how their learning integrates across these, and across the programme as a whole, incorporating relevant evidence as appropriate (see below).
Semester 1:
- Introductory reflection (personal goals and growth - formative)
- Mid-semester reflection (focusing on aspect(s) of knowledge creation, e.g. critique of standard setting frameworks - formative)
- End-semester submission (integration of Personal Growth and Knowledge Creation, e.g. annotated version of marking criteria/assessment rubric; 30% weighting - summative)
Semester 2:
- Reflection on progress towards goals and growth (formative)
- Mid-semester draft output (integration of Personal Growth and Knowledge Creation, e.g. annotated script/outline for peer coaching/mentoring session, comparison and critique of different growth frameworks, and how these work in practice - formative)
- Final output and accompanying reflective submission (incorporating evidence from across the year linking Personal Growth and Knowledge Creation; 70% weighting - summative)
2 formative pieces (at the start of each semester) will focus on goal setting and progress.
Evidence Portfolio
Students are also required to submit a portfolio of work evidencing the activities and application from across this course and other courses, linked to the reflective submissions, with relevant evidence also expected to demonstrate the course Learning Outcomes. |
Feedback |
Feedback will be given on the summative submissions (including one half-way through the course). Students will also receive feedback - both from staff and their peers - on the formative submissions.
In addition to this feedback linked to specific components of assessment, students will also receive feedback on their ideas and their formative work during workshop sessions and discussions.
A key element of the course is individual goal setting: students will learn about different frameworks for this and also learn how to apply such frameworks to the setting and evaluation of their own individual goals. Feedback on these goals (and the reflection on them) will be given at least twice each year. |
No Exam Information |
Learning Outcomes
On completion of this course, the student will be able to:
- Demonstrate an awareness and understanding of the scope and dynamic nature of knowledge creation in specialist areas, and how this is embedded and integrated in key theories, principles and practice of interdisciplinary research.
- Apply knowledge, skills and understanding of advanced methods in varied and unpredictable practical and professional contexts, reflecting on and understanding the usefulness and limitations of these.
- Present and communicate arguments and ideas using informal and formal methods appropriate for a range of internal and external audiences across different contexts, while critically evaluating the significance and utility of these.
- Work collaboratively within interdisciplinary groups in ways that show awareness of different roles and responsibilities, while exercising autonomy, initiative, leadership and accountability when carrying out specific research tasks relevant to group and individual work, under agreed deadlines.
- Understand and apply advanced models and theories of personal and professional development, including wellbeing, and develop and reflectively work towards their goals in order to meet personal, academic and professional challenges, while identifying further opportunities for development and growth.
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Reading List
Indicative Reading List:
Biggs J. (2003). Aligning teaching for constructing learning. Published by The Higher Education Academy, York.
Boud, F. & Molloy E. (2013). Rethinking models of feedback for learning: the challenge of design. Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 38(6), 698-712.
Eraut, 1994. Developing professional knowledge and competence. London: Falmer Press.
Hughes, I. (2001). But isn't this what you're paid for? The pros and cons of peer and self assessment. Planet, 3(1), 20-23.
Orland-Barak, L. (2005). Portfolios as evidence of reflective practice: what remains 'untold'. Educational Research, 47(1), 25-44. |
Additional Information
Graduate Attributes and Skills |
Undertaking this course will enable students to develop, apply and reflect on their research and enquiry skills by using a range of methods of academic enquiry and analysis needed for interdisciplinary practice. Students will exercise autonomy, responsibility and initiative while communicating and collaborating with peers and partners across a range of contexts, working in ways that show awareness of and reflection on collective and individual responsibilities. Students will use a wide range of personal and professional skills to adapt to unfamiliar contexts and environments, and demonstrate the ability to transfer learning and skills across these.
Graduate attributes are closely linked to the learning outcomes, which have a degree of flexibility to provide students with autonomy. With appropriate guidance and feedback, this flexibility will allow students to focus on particular skills and mindsets in the context of different experiences, selecting specific attributes they consider the most important to reflect upon, linked to current and future professional and personal aims, and career aspirations. |
Keywords | Reflection,Transitions,Employability,Design Thinking,Leadership |
Contacts
Course organiser | Prof Sabine Rolle
Tel: (0131 6)50 3670
Email: S.Rolle@ed.ac.uk |
Course secretary | Mr Matt Bryant
Tel:
Email: Matt.Bryant@ed.ac.uk |
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