The Digital HealthLab: Supporting Interdisciplinary Projects in Engineering and in Health Education
Abstract
The importance of promoting interdisciplinary educations is recognized, however, initiating collaborative interdisciplinary educational projectsis challenging. In this paper,we will present the Digital HealthLab(DHLab),an educational module thatintend to define systematic support for students who wished to work with interdisciplinary projects in their bachelor or master thesis. The students were from computing and from health and social care, and their projects influenced byissues regarding technology development and use. By presenting DHLab, we aim to contribute to a deeper understanding of initiating interdisciplinary education at universities. Data was collectedduring the initiation and evaluation of DHLab from observations and group interviews. The DHLabwas an optional, yearly educational module. We will illustrate lessons learned, and challenges and benefits with the module. Our experiences are important to highlight since there are limited knowledge on starting and running interdisciplinary educational modules in areas without local collaboration traditions. Our results showed that using processes for planning educational activities was essential to understand needs, requirements, and possibilities from the different types of educators. However, future research is neededto determine key activities systematically supporting the start of interdisciplinary student projects with focus on the role of the different participating environments.
Copyright (c) 2018 Journal of Applied Technical and Educational Sciences
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
The submitting author warrants that the submission is original and that she/he is the author of the submission
together with the named co-authors; to the extend the submission incorporates text passages, figures, data or
other material from the work of others, the submitting author has obtained any necessary permission.
Articles in this journal are published under the Creative Commons Attribution Licence (CC-BY), the author retains
the copyright. By submitting an article the author grants to this journal the non-exclusive right to publish it
(e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book).