or forms of communication from two or more disciplines or established
areas of expertise
so that they can explain a phenomenon, solve a problem, create a product, or raise a new
question in ways that would have been unlikely through a single discipline.
The National Curriculum Framework 2005 proposes
five guiding principles for
curriculum development:(i) connecting knowledge to life outside the school; (ii) ensuring
that learning shifts away from rote methods; (iii) enriching the curriculum so that it goes
beyond
textbooks; (iv) making examinations more flexible and integrating them with
classroom life; and (v) nurturing an overriding identity informed by caring concerns within
the democratic polity of our country. These principles are enshrined in the basics of
interdisciplinary learning. The executive summary of this landmark document categorically
states ‘The NCF recommends the softening of subject boundaries
so that children can get a
taste of integrated knowledge and the joy of understanding’. A careful scrutiny of the
document shows that it supports interdisciplinary learning. One comes across statements
like ‘For an enabling curriculum, certain themes that facilitate interdisciplinary thinking
need to be incorporated’.
Here is an example of how Interdisciplinary learning
is visualized for the topic
‘Migration’.
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