Tags

Related Posts

Share This

On this rock…

The future of IDIS 102 is a controversial issue at Trinity Western University. Many people misunderstand the goal of the course. To set the record straight: the vision of IDIS 102 is to introduce students to what is expected of them by this university and faculty. It gives them an intellectual history of the university and a framework for the rest of their academic career. This allows students to be interdisciplinary in their thinking, even as they specialize in their respective majors.

IDIS 102’s future is contingent on changes in perceptions of the course and involves a complex relationship between academics and administration. Dr. Harold Faw was chair of a task force that was in charge of studying IDIS and bringing recommendations for change to the Undergraduate Academic Council (UAC).

The student response to IDIS 102 has steadily improved every year through various changes, including the addition of Professor Calvin Townsend, the discussion groups led by upperclassmen, and the use of a course text, written by Dr. Jens Zimmerman and Dr. Norm Klassen. Students’ perceptions of the course are changing; they are increasingly catching onto the idea that IDIS is something distinctive and worth pursuing.

But who will implement these ideas, this vision in which so many people are starting to believe? Last year, Dr. Klassen and Dr. Zimmerman taught IDIS 102 together. This year, Dr. Klassen is leaving TWU, so Dr. Zimmerman is teaching IDIS 102 alongside Professor Townsend. Next year, Dr. Zimmerman is expecting to take a research chair and will not be available to coordinate or teach IDIS 102.

Dr. Zimmerman hesitated to answer who would teach IDIS in the future, although, he named Linda Schwartz as a possibility. He pointed out that having two people from different disciplines would be the best solution; this would make the course truly interdisciplinary. When asked about this issue, Dr. Faw mentioned, with a question mark in his voice, names like Calvin Townsend, Peg Peters, or Mike Goheen. Dr. Klassen did not give any names, but said,
“The future of IDIS could be challenged by a certain desire to divide the world along secular and Christian tracks. IDIS is intended to be an approach based on intermingling of faith, secular, pagan, enlightenment ideas, and an understanding that these ideas are not mutually exclusive.”

The book used for IDIS 102 was required reading for all who went to the Faculty Retreat this year. The faculty thoroughly discussed the book and gave it substantial praise. Nevertheless, IDIS does not have enough ownership from any side of TWU’s academics. It is difficult to find professors to teach IDIS, but it remains the only statement of a unified academic vision of the university taught to students.

In the past, the administration has not considered these academic questions as central to the university. The funding split between Student Life and academics demonstrates this. For example, University 101 gets generous funding, runs without many bureaucratic difficulties, and has full-time staff running the program. IDIS 102, on the other hand, has found itself struggling each year to receive funding and has no full-time department or staff. This dichotomy is not the fault of Student Life or academia, but is the result of deeper issues.

If IDIS is the central academic vision of this university, why does it have to fight for financial survival? IDIS needs to be its own department and have its own budget and staff. It should not need someone to champion its cause; everyone concerned about the university should rally for the success of IDIS as the central vision of the TWU. What happens with IDIS 102, if the vision is lost or not, will be a telling statement about the commitment that TWU is willing to make to academic excellence and interdisciplinary studies as a Christian liberal arts university.

Like!
0