Achieving success with RISE: A widely implementable, iterative, structured process for mastering interdisciplinary team science collaborations

Author:

Mather Martha E1ORCID,Granco Gabriel2ORCID,Bergtold Jason S3,Caldas Marcellus M4,Heier Stamm Jessica L5,Sheshukov Aleksey Y6,Sanderson Matthew R7,Daniels Melinda D8

Affiliation:

1. US Geological Survey's Kansas Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit, at Kansas State University , Manhattan, Kansas , United States

2. Department of Geography and Anthropology at California State Polytechnic University , Pomona, California , United States

3. Department of Agricultural Economics at Kansas State University , Manhattan, Kansas , United States

4. Department of Geography and Geospatial Sciences at Kansas State University , Manhattan, Kansas , United States

5. Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Systems Engineering at Kansas State University , Manhattan, Kansas , United States

6. Department of Biological and Agricultural Engineering at Kansas State University , Manhattan, Kansas , United States

7. Department of Sociology, Anthropology, and Social Work and the Department of Geography and Geospatial Sciences at Kansas State University , Manhattan, Kansas , United States

8. Stroud Water Research Center , Avondale, Pennsylvania , United States

Abstract

Abstract Scientific experts from different disciplines often struggle to mesh their specialized perspectives into the shared mindset that is needed to address difficult and persistent environmental, ecological, and societal problems. Many traditional graduate programs provide excellent research and technical skill training. However, these programs often do not teach a systematic way to learn team skills, nor do they offer a protocol for identifying and tackling increasingly integrated interdisciplinary (among disciplines) and transdisciplinary (among researchers and stakeholders) questions. As a result, professionals trained in traditional graduate programs (e.g., current graduate students and employed practitioners) may not have all of the collaborative skills needed to advance solutions to difficult scientific problems. In the present article, we illustrate a tractable, widely implementable structured process called RISE that accelerates the development of these missing skills. The RISE process (Route to Identifying, learning, and practicing interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary team Skills to address difficult Environmental problems) can be used by diverse teams as a tool for research, professional interactions, or training. RISE helps professionals with different expertise learn from each other by repeatedly asking team-developed questions that are tested using an interactive quantitative tool (e.g., agent-based models, machine learning, case studies) applied to a shared problem framework and data set. Outputs from the quantitative tool are then discussed and interpreted as a team, considering all team members’ perspectives, disciplines, and expertise. After this synthesis, RISE is repeated with new questions that the team jointly identified in earlier data interpretation discussions. As a result, individual perspectives, originally informed by disciplinary training, are complemented by a shared understanding of team function and elevated interdisciplinary knowledge.

Funder

National Science Foundation

USDA

AFRI

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences

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