Seattle, Washington
June 28, 1998
June 28, 1998
July 1, 1998
2153-5965
Liberal Education (LED)
4
3.266.1 - 3.266.4
10.18260/1-2--7107
https://peer.asee.org/7107
411
Session 3661
Ethics, Invention and Design: Creating Cross-Disciplinary Collaborations
Michael E. Gorman Technology, Culture & Communications and Systems Engineering University of Virginia
When people ask me what I teach, a one sentence answer won’t suffice. A psychologist should be teaching psychology courses. Instead, I have to explain that I cover topics like invention and design, engineering ethics and communications. Furthermore, I do research on scientific and technological thinking, which is not one of the recognized specialties in psychology--though a colleague and I are trying to change that (Feist & Gorman, In Press).
This paper is really the story of how I came to this unusual position--and why I like it. As an undergraduate psychology major, I spent more time on an independent study of scientific thought than on my honors thesis in psychology. In graduate school, I combined social, cognitive, and history of psychology, and also took courses on advanced non-fiction writing. The really interesting questions always seemed to slip between disciplines.
My first job was at Michigan Technological University, an engineering school which wanted a psychologist who could teach writing. One of my many responsibilities was team-teaching a course with W. Bernard Carlson, a historian of technology. He and I wrote a grant proposal to collaborate on a study of the invention of the telephone.
The key to transcending disciplinary boundaries is collaboration (Okada & Simon, 1997). I provided psychological analyses of scientific problem-solving: Bernie added a deep knowledge of how to do archival research in history of technology, and where the sources were. The grant was funded after Bern moved to the University of Virginia, and I followed him.
A Michigan Tech, I was split between three departments--humanities, social sciences and education. This sounds like an ideal, transdisciplinary situation, but in fact, the politics of funding led the three departments to pull in different directions. In particular, they and I struggled over where psychology should have its home.
At the University of Virginia, I came into what was then the Humanities Division (see paper by Ingrid Soudek). Whereas my departments at Michigan Tech were outside of Engineering and were expected to develop their own majors and graduate programs, the Division was within the Engineering School and was expected to focus on engineering education. The structure of the Division encouraged cooperation across disciplines (see paper by Ingrid Soudek).
My work with Bernie resulted in several scholarly publications (Carlson & Gorman, 1990; Gorman, 1990; Gorman, Mehalik, Carlson, & Oblon, 1993). When we showed one or two to a sympathetic Dean, he challenged us to show how some of this work would benefit engineering students. Fair enough. I created a rough design for an extended invention module based on the telephone and ran it by quite a few people, who helped me re-shape it.
Gorman, M. E. (1998, June), Ethics, Invention And Design: Creating Cross Disciplinary Collaborations Paper presented at 1998 Annual Conference, Seattle, Washington. 10.18260/1-2--7107
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