Promoting interdisciplinary education − the Vienna Doctoral Programme on Water Resource Systems
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Published:2012-02-13
Issue:2
Volume:16
Page:457-472
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ISSN:1607-7938
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Container-title:Hydrology and Earth System Sciences
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Hydrol. Earth Syst. Sci.
Author:
Blöschl G.,Carr G.,Bucher C.,Farnleitner A. H.,Rechberger H.,Wagner W.,Zessner M.
Abstract
Abstract. The Vienna Doctoral Programme on Water Resource Systems (DK-WRS) is a programme that aims to educate students in interdisciplinary water science through cutting edge research at an international level. It is funded by the Austrian Science Fund and designed to run over a period of 12 yr during which 80 doctoral students are anticipated to graduate. This paper reports on our experiences of setting up and implementing the Programme. We identify three challenges: integrating the disciplines, maintaining depth in an interdisciplinary programme, and teaching subjects remote to each student's core expertise. To address these challenges we adopt a number of approaches. We use three levels of instruments to foster integration across the disciplines: joint groups (e.g. a joint study programme), joint science questions (e.g. developed in annual symposia), and joint study sites. To maintain depth we apply a system of quality control including regular feedback sessions, theses by journal publications and international study exchange. For simultaneously teaching students from civil and environmental engineering, biology, geology, chemistry, mathematics we use visually explicit teaching, learning by doing, extra mentoring and by cross relating associated subjects. Our initial assessment of the Programme shows some very positive outcomes. Joint science questions formed between students from various disciplines indicate integration is being achieved. The number of successful publications in top journals suggests that depth is maintained. Positive feedback from the students on the variety and clarity of the courses indicates the teaching strategy is working well. Our experiences have shown that implementing and running an interdisciplinary doctoral programme has its challenges and is demanding in terms of time and human resources but seeing interactions progress and watching people grow and develop their way of thinking in an interdisciplinary environment is a valuable reward.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Engineering,General Environmental Science
Reference27 articles.
1. Blöschl, G.: Hydrologic synthesis: Across processes, places, and scales, Water Resour. Res., 42, W03s02 https://doi.org/10.1029/2005wr004319, 2006. 2. Blöschl, G.: How to write (and publish) a scientific paper in hydrology, available at: http://www.egu.eu/fileadmin/user_upload/Division_HS/how_to_write_bloe.pdf, last access: 8 November 2011, 2011. 3. Blöschl, G., Bucher, C., Carr, G., Farnleitner, A. H., Rechberger, H., Wagner, W., and Zessner, M.: Promoting Interdisciplinary Education: The Vienna Doctoral Programme on Water Resource Systems, Geophysical Research Abstracts, 12, EGU2010-1802, EGU General Assembly 2010, Vienna, Austria, 2010. 4. Blöschl, G., Bucher, C., Carr, G., Farnleitner, A. H., Rechberger, H., Wagner, W., and Zessner, M.: The Vienna Doctoral Programme on Water Resource Systems: Achievements and challenges of an interdisciplinary research and education programme, Geophysical Research Abstracts, 13, EGU2011-3430, EGU General Assembly 2011, Vienna, Austria, 2011a. 5. Blöschl, G., Takeuchi, K., Jain, S., Farnleitner, A., and Schumann, A.: Preface, in: Risk in water resources management, IAHS-AISH P., 347, IAHS Press, Wallingford, 2011b.
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