An internet definition of interdisciplinary study is as follows: An interdisciplinary community or project is made up of people from multiple disciplines and professions who are engaged in creating and applying new knowledge as they work together as equal stakeholders in addressing a common challenge. Multidisciplinary can be defined as such: the act of joining together two or more disciplines without integration. Each discipline yields discipline specific results while any integration would be left to a third party observer. An example of multidisciplinarity would be a panel presentation on the many facets of the AIDS pandemic (medicine, politics, epidemiology) in which each section is given as a stand-alone presentation (wikipedia.org).
Interestingly enough, my company (Excel Sports) takes a definite interdisciplinary approach to attacking projects and problems. We have coaches, players, and administrators taking ALL of the aforementioned roles on. For example, I will lead a class using my playing background, as well as my coaching background, and supervise and set up a class under the label of administrator. ALL of the employees of Excel Sports have backgrounds as players and coaches, as well as referees and administrators. Setting up a league, or camp, or class puts all of our experience to the test. We are NOT multidisciplinary because we are all integrated in our approaches. When I work with another coach, its not JUST a player working with JUST a coach. We both have experience working from multiple disciplines, and doing so simultaneously. Our "disciplines" are structured as I mentioned before. We have players/coaches/administrators/promoters all working together, all performing these tasks at the same time, making us pretty much interdisciplinary by nature. Our organizational structure is essentially heirarchical. We have our President/CEO Dandrick Moton, then below him is the second in command who takes over for Dandrick when he is out of town...he is Coach Mike (coach, administrator). Below him, we have all the other coaches/players/administrators/promoters. That is where I come in...at the bottom.
Wednesday, February 11, 2009
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)

No comments:
Post a Comment