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Singapore revamp breaks down disciplinary barriers

Sciences and humanities to be taught side by side starting this year in two leading institutions

Published on
April 6, 2021
Last updated
April 12, 2021
Two performers in the doubles International Pole Championship in Singapore perform together as a metaphor for two main universities of Singapore has brought together its largest and most established faculties.
Source: Getty

Singapore鈥檚 two main universities are making major changes to their curricula and structures to encourage interdisciplinarity and give students the skills they need in the post-Covid world.

The National University of Singapore (NUS) has brought together its largest and most established faculties 鈥 the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences and the Faculty of Science 鈥 into a new College of Humanities and Sciences, co-headed by the faculties鈥 two deans. Students entering in 2021 can choose any combination of major, second major, minor or specialty.

Sun Yeneng, the science dean, told聽探花视频聽that he hopes students will come away with the 鈥渋ntegrated thinking skills鈥 increasingly sought after in a 鈥渧olatile, uncertain, complex and ambiguous world鈥.

鈥淭heir learning will be deepened when they reflect on the connections between ideas and concepts across different disciplines,鈥 he said.

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Robbie Goh, NUS鈥 arts and social sciences dean, told聽THE聽that there is 鈥渋ncreasing awareness in academia, industry and government that developing effective solutions to major real-world challenges requires a working knowledge and skills acquired鈥n both STEM and humanities and social sciences subjects鈥.

He聽said that common core curricula traditionally involved 鈥渂askets of disciplines鈥hat bear little regard for the connection between courses鈥. NUS鈥 new college has a curriculum that was 鈥渃onceptualised incorporating specially designed courses to introduce our students to interdisciplinarity鈥, he said.

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Nanyang Technological University, Singapore, has been piloting a new common core curriculum, which will be fully introduced in 2021-22. The pilots involved three colleges: engineering, science, and humanities and social sciences. The final modules will focus on specific challenges such as climate change or global health.

鈥淎s educators, we often ask ourselves, what makes an educated person?鈥 asked the NTU president, Subra Suresh. 鈥淭hose who can thrive in this rapidly changing global environment will have broader interest and knowledge outside of their specific disciplines, while also possessing some deep domain expertise.鈥

The push towards interdisciplinarity has been happening over the past year, for example with the opening of NUS鈥櫬Centre on AI Technology for Humankind聽(AiTH).

David De Cremer, AiTH鈥檚 director and a business professor, told聽THE聽that 鈥渁s a society, we need to be careful that we do not overemphasise the importance of technology education over social sciences鈥.

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He warned that 鈥渞apid technological development and messages from gurus that 鈥榠f you don鈥檛 become tech-savvy enough, you will be left behind鈥 has instilled a certain fear among people that they may miss out on career opportunities if they do not think like data scientists.

鈥淗owever, if we sideline social sciences in our educational efforts, then we are creating future generations that will think, act and reason like machines. What鈥檚 the point in being a half-baked machine who does not know how to interact with other humans?鈥

滨苍听听蹿辞谤听Harvard Business Review in March, Professor De Cremer co-wrote with Garry Kasparov that 鈥淎I should augment human intelligence, not replace it鈥.

Mr Kasparov, the chess great who famously IBM鈥檚 Deep Blue computer, said during聽that education was the one field to have stalled in its development.

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鈥淚f someone from the 19th century was transported to today, he would recognise nothing except for the classroom, where the teacher in the front of the class is the sole authority,鈥 he said. 鈥淎ny student, with a swipe of the finger on a phone, has access to more data in a few seconds than any professor could ever teach. And so we have to teach them how to process that data.鈥

joyce.lau@timeshighereducation.com

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