Modeling Interdisciplinary Inquiry allows us to take the
next step in this educational program by using the model,
the insights, and the intellectual methods of the interdisciplinary
seminar as a foundation for a postdoctoral program. Such a
program, organized around the principle of interdisciplinary
scholarship and teaching, offers training to scholars in the
first stages of their teaching and research careers that reaches
beyond their own dissertation work. That training, in the
form of a formal relationship with a senior scholar in a field
allied to but distinct from their dissertation field will,
we think, clearly move postdoctoral scholars beyond the questions
and methods that they were able to raise and use in their
dissertations. The postdoctoral program also involves young
scholars in the organization and running of a graduate seminar
designed to raise and interrogate the problems, questions,
methods, and models of research in the humanities and social
sciences that cross traditional disciplinary fields. The seminar
in Theory and Methods is aimed at an audience of advanced
undergraduates and graduate students. Finally, the postdoctoral
program involves these young scholars in teaching within an
undergraduate program designed to emphasize the possibilities
for intellectual coherence of work in the humanities and social
sciences.
The postdoctoral program is governed not by individual departments
but by a Steering Committee. The committee is composed of
senior faculty from across the humanities and social sciences
who have in their own work shown a commitment to interdisciplinary
teaching and research. The committee oversees 1) the program
of academic and intellectual mentorship putting the young
scholars in touch and in formal relationships with senior
Washington University faculty working in allied fields, 2)
the seminar in Theory and Methods to be run by the postdoctoral
fellows, and 3) a teaching program that allows the postdoctoral
fellows to bring to our undergraduate students the values
and insights of their own work and their experience in Modeling
Interdisciplinary Inquiry.
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