Interdisciplinary Units Find FOCUS a Gateway to First-Year Students
During three decades of success as one of the signature undergraduate initiatives at Duke, the FOCUS program of first-year seminars has continued to struggle with one big challenge: How to enroll more students from the Pratt School of Engineering, which had been part of FOCUS at its beginning but had taken a five-year hiatus.
Pratt鈥檚 return to FOCUS this year harkens back to the program鈥檚 original vision: go interdisciplinary.
This year FOCUS is presenting three clusters developed in conjunction with the university鈥檚 interdisciplinary institutes and initiatives. Two are from the Initiative for Science & Society and the Kenan Institute for Ethics. A third cluster called Global Energy, offered for the first time this year, was the brainchild of Pratt Dean Ravi Bellamkonda and has been organized with support from the interdisciplinary 老牛影视 Energy Initiative. About half of the 30 students enrolled in the energy cluster are Pratt first-year students, the largest enrollment of Pratt students in FOCUS in recent years.
Each FOCUS cluster offers a combination of three to four classes linked by a theme. The students meet in seminars but also hold weekly dinners with faculty members. All students in a cluster live in the same residential hall.
An interdisciplinary approach for a FOCUS cluster is not new; in fact, since the beginning, most clusters involve faculty members from different disciplines. Instructors from both the Brain Sciences and Global Health institutes have been involved in past clusters. In past years, Brain Sciences faculty have led clusters on Cognitive Neuroscience and Exploring the Mind.
鈥淭he FOCUS program has always been interdisciplinary,鈥 said FOCUS director Edna Andrews, Nancy and Jeffrey Marcus Professor. 鈥淚t鈥檚 just that we are becoming even more interdisciplinary.鈥
University officials say the involvement of interdisciplinary units helps the program fulfill its mission of starting new students off within 鈥渁 vibrant and engaging intellectual ecosystem,鈥 said Arlie Petters, dean of academic affairs for Trinity College. It also provides one model for how interdisciplinary units can collaborate with the traditional schools and departments on classroom initiatives.
鈥淪tudents鈥 first exposure to a discipline impacts their desire to explore the field further,鈥 Petters said. 鈥淭hrough FOCUS, our undergraduate students are able to experience an academic field through a living-learning-community model that fosters a sense of family and belonging. This is a fundamental early step in creating ties between students and the disciplinary and interdisciplinary opportunities offered by academic units.鈥
Faculty in both the Pratt School and the Energy Initiative are excited to be part of a program that this year received more than 500 applications for the . Many admitted students say FOCUS is one of the factors they consider in choosing Duke.
鈥淭he problem has been simple and pragmatic, one that everyone acknowledged: It鈥檚 been hard for Pratt students to fit FOCUS classes into their first semester,鈥 said Nico Hotz, director of the energy cluster and a Pratt School faculty member affiliated with the Energy Initiative.
鈥淭he dean鈥檚 office looked into this and came up with idea of energy,鈥 Hotz said. 鈥淎s soon as the dean asked me to look into this, I thought of my many contacts with the Energy Initiative. I thought this would be something that would interest students and faculty would want to teach.鈥
鈥淓veryone at the Energy Initiative recognized that this was a great fit,鈥 said Brian Murray, the initiative鈥檚 director and a Nicholas School faculty member. 鈥淚t can be challenging to engage students before they reach their junior and senior years when they have more electives. The opportunity to begin connecting with students as soon as they arrive on campus is extremely attractive. We hope this experience will extend beyond freshman year, as interested students take advantage of a robust slate of curricular and cocurricular energy opportunities throughout their time at Duke.鈥
The hope is some of the students will continue on and graduate with certificates in the program. The Kenan Institute has attracted students through its FOCUS cluster successfully for several years; Like the energy cluster, Science & Society is offering a cluster on Science and the Public for the first time.
The interdisciplinary units鈥 academic approach also fits the FOCUS mission to have first-year students doing original research in a seminar setting, said Misha Angrist, the director of the Science and the Public cluster for Science & Society.
鈥淲e ask first years to think at a high level about important societal problems and not just memorize stuff or absorb facts in an arbitrary way. It鈥檚 very much rooted in what鈥檚 going on in the world.鈥
-- Misha Angrist
鈥淭he coolest thing about FOCUS is that we鈥檙e throwing big questions at students right off,鈥 Angrist said. 鈥淚 like to quote Princeton biologist David Botstein who has compared the traditional science curriculum to hazing: for three years students stand in cold water while they take foundational courses before they finally get to apply it to interesting questions. FOCUS pushes against that. We ask first years to think at a high level about important societal problems and not just memorize stuff or absorb facts in an arbitrary way. It鈥檚 very much rooted in what鈥檚 going on in the world.鈥
That 鈥渋nverted鈥 approach 鈥 which has long been a mark of the FOCUS program 鈥 is making its way into more traditional classes as well. Hotz said one reason why creation of the energy cluster was so seamless for the initiative and for the Pratt School is that it fits Pratt Dean Bellamkonda鈥檚 effort to remake the first-year educational experience. The wider changes include creation of the Engineering 101 course that gets students working on large-real world design and engineering questions.
鈥淚n the first semester, they get to take very specific and deep dive into a topic they are interested in,鈥 Hotz said. 鈥淭hey don鈥檛 have to wait for their junior year.鈥
With the university鈥檚 academic strategic plan pledging stronger support both for FOCUS and for interdisciplinary academic offerings, the future may hold an even stronger connection between the two.
鈥淲hen I came to Duke 15 years ago, the word 鈥榠nterdisciplinary鈥 was new to my ear,鈥 Angrist said. 鈥淏ut now I feel like it鈥檚 at the core of so much of what happens on campus.鈥