Education in collaboration with cities

The intentions of transdisciplinary courses

Journal Article (2023)
Author(s)

N.L. Bohm (TU Delft - Urban Development Management)

Renate Klaassen (TU Delft - Policy & Implementation)

EM van Bueren (TU Delft - Management in the Built Environment)

Perry den Brok (Wageningen University & Research)

Research Group
Urban Development Management
Copyright
© 2023 N.L. Bohm, R.G. Klaassen, Ellen van Bueren, Perry den Brok
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1108/IJSHE-11-2022-0359
More Info
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Publication Year
2023
Language
English
Copyright
© 2023 N.L. Bohm, R.G. Klaassen, Ellen van Bueren, Perry den Brok
Research Group
Urban Development Management
Issue number
4
Volume number
25 (2024)
Pages (from-to)
801-820
Reuse Rights

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Abstract

Purpose
In collaboration with their home cities, universities increasingly develop courses in which students investigate urban sustainability challenges. This paper aims to understand how far-reaching the collaboration with urban stakeholders in these courses is and what students are meant to learn from the transdisciplinary pedagogies.

Design/methodology/approach
This research is designed as a qualitative multiple-case study into the intentions of transdisciplinary courses in which universities collaborate with their home cities: Delft University of Technology in Delft and Amsterdam Institute for Advanced Metropolitan Solutions in Amsterdam. The study compares the written intentions of eight courses in course descriptions with the ideal intentions that teachers describe in interviews.

Findings
First, seven of the eight investigated courses were designed for urban stakeholders to participate at a distance or as a client but rarely was a course intended to lead to a collaborative partnership between the city and students. Second, the metacognitive learning objectives, such as learning to deal with biases and values of others or getting to know one’s strengths and weaknesses in collaboration, were often absent in the course descriptions. Learning objectives relating to metacognition are at the heart of transdisciplinary work, yet when they remain implicit in the learning objectives, they are difficult to teach.

Originality/value
This paper presents insight into the levels of participation intended in transdisciplinary courses. Furthermore, it shows the (mis)alignment between intended learning objectives in course descriptions and teachers’ ideals. Understanding both the current state of transdisciplinarity in sustainability courses and what teachers envision is vital for the next steps in the development of transdisciplinary education.

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