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In addition to the mentor relationship and the Theory and
Methods Seminar, the third important component of Modeling
Interdisciplinary Inquiry is the opportunity to apply and
test the program's intellectual concerns in the undergraduate
classroom -- and in a way that promises wide benefit to the
entire teaching effort of the College of Arts & Sciences.
A
recent and extensive internal review by a special commission
of faculty and students has made it clear that universal Freshman
Seminars will soon become the bedrock of our undergraduate
educational enterprise. The commission's first recommendation
is that such seminars, enrolling a maximum of 15, be available
to all incoming students. We have already taken some experimental
steps in this direction, with our Focus, Text & Tradition,
Hewlett, and International Leadership programs; these programs
currently enroll about half the freshman class on a first-come
basis. But the best and most sustainable means of making such
seminars available to all is still very much in question.
An interdisciplinary freshman seminar drawing upon the concerns,
experiences, and insights animating Modeling Interdisciplinary
Inquiry would not only strengthen our offerings in this area,
but also help to stimulate and guide the trans-departmental,
college-wide conversations needed to make this new emphasis
on introductory seminars genuinely exciting and productive
for faculty and students alike. Postdoctoral Fellows in Modeling
Interdisciplinary Inquiry will teach within the Freshman Seminar
program as well as in the new Interdisciplinary Project in
the Humanities.
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