The role of academic and extra-academic actors in transdisciplinary challenge-based learning

Gemma O’Sullivan*, Yvette Baggen, Cassandra Tho, Despoina Georgiou, Heleen J.M. Pennings, Antoine van den Beemt

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

To solve societal, sustainability-related issues, higher education requires new and innovative didactical concepts in learning. We introduce the concept of transdisciplinary-CBL (T-CBL) to explicate the role of diverse disciplinary and extra-academic actors in learning processes where students work in teams to co-create innovative solutions to societal challenges. To increase our understanding of how students learn from different actors in T-CBL, we used a survey, semi-structured interviews and sociograms to elaborate the nature of interactions with and the value students ascribed to these actors. The results show that students learn from a wide variety of actors in T-CBL. Extra-academic actors help by contributing expertise and informing solution pathways, whereas friends and family provide emotional support. T-CBL results in specific learning gains including perspective-taking. The results offer a picture of T-CBL as social learning in which students interact with networks of actors from which they learn ‘on-demand’.

Original languageEnglish
JournalTeaching in Higher Education
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 26 Feb 2025

Keywords

  • higher education
  • sustainability
  • Transdisciplinarity
  • transdisciplinary challenge-based learning

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