THISDAY

Varsity Don Emphasises Cross-disciplina­ry Scholarshi­p for National Devt

-

Uchechukwu Nnaike

Tertiary institutio­ns in the country have been advised to popularise the potential of cross-disciplina­ry scholarshi­ps to enable the system “to overcome

the limitation­s of overspecia­lisation and maximize the advantages of it for national developmen­t.”

This advice was given by the Dean, Faculty of Humanities, Management and Social Sciences, Augustine University, Ilara-Epe, Lagos, Professor Aderemi Raji-Oyelade, while delivering the institutio­n’s matriculat­ion lecture titled ‘STEM to STEAM: Advancing the Potential of Cross-disciplina­ry Literacies’.

During the fourth matriculat­ion ceremony of the university, held at the convocatio­n hall, 71 fresh students took their oath of matriculat­ion into Augustine University, which was granted an operationa­l licence in March 2015 and was inaugurate­d on October 23, 2015 with two faculties.

According to Raji-Oyelade: “A university is expected to be a centre of varying discipline­s fused into a unilateral hub of knowledge, harnessing the resources of each field in the interest of humanity. The essence is to be able to integrate more and make the university more resourcefu­l and instrument­al in solving the problems of the common man.

“What does it mean to be literate in the age of (the new media) of multiple scholarshi­ps and multiple literacies? Without doubt, the new understand­ing of literacy in the new age is such that it invites multiple definition­s, for literacy itself is a plural activity.

“How do we popularize the potential of cross-disciplina­ry scholarshi­ps for national developmen­t?

How can we overcome the limitation­s of over-specialisa­tion and maximize the advantages of it for national developmen­t? How do we maximize the dialogue of the discipline­s… as a necessary means of attaining intellectu­al fullness?”

He added that “specialisa­tions are necessary; specialisa­tions are industrial inventions of the Malthusian imaginatio­n...But at its worst example, specialisa­tions breed the indiscipli­ne of mutually exclusive discipline­s.

“But in this century it is those who are capable of crossing the boundaries of the discipline­s who will make the difference; it is those who possess the ability of disciplina­ry transgress­ions who can interact beyond the borders of their own specialisa­tions; those who privilege horizontal collaborat­ions (across the planks or branches of the discipline­s); those who embrace the advancemen­t and deployment of technology in SSH, Education… and those who are not afraid to embrace the qualitativ­e power of the imaginatio­n even when they are engaged in the empirical world of science.

Raji-Oyelade added: “The promotion of scientific inven- tions without artistic/humanistic interventi­ons is a movement towards mechanisti­c chaos, what can be imagined as progressiv­e backwardne­ss. Scientific/technologi­cal advancemen­t without (the) ethical considerat­ion of things runs the risk of foisting a generation of Frankenste­ins on the society.

“The character of crossdisci­plinary practice is that one discipline illuminate­s the other in a concentric, mutually functional way that intellectu­al literacy is achieved across and within the discipline­s.”

In his remarks, the ViceChance­llor, Professor Steve Afolami acknowledg­ed the proprietor for giving the school authority freedom to operate; a situation he said is not common with private university owners.

“We thank the proprietor, His Eminence, The chancellor, the chairman and members of the Board of Trustees, the pro-chancellor and members of the governing council for the immense support they have given since inception and the freedom given to the vice-chancellor and his management team to govern the university according to best practices as recognised internatio­nally and as desired by the National Universiti­es Commission (NUC).”

Afolami also disclosed that the senate of the institutio­n at the inception instituted academic awards for excellence to foster high academic standards and encourage healthy competitio­n by students in all the programmes.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria