Case Study of Good T&L Practices > List of Case Studies > Transdisciplinary Innovation Team
Biography
From left to right: Prof. Nick Yin ZHANG, Dr. Glos Wing Yan HO, Prof. William Kwok Wai CHEUNG, Prof. Kingsley Siu King NG, Prof. Wendy Yajun HUANG
Awardee of 2025
(Category: Collaborative Team)
Team Leader
Prof. William Kwok Wai CHEUNG
Associate Vice-President
(Transdisciplinary Education)
Professor, Department of Computer Science
Hong Kong Baptist University
Prof. William
Cheung is the Associate Vice-President (Transdisciplinary Education) and
Professor of Computer Science. He plays a central role in developing and
implementing the transdisciplinary (TD) curriculum at HKBU. He works at both
strategic and operational levels to enable a vision of core
institutionalisation of TD education in line with the university’s strategic
plan and focuses on the design and implementation processes for embedding TD
learning opportunities into undergraduate curricula. As a computer scientist
with research expertise in AI, he also championed the development of
AI-empowered software systems to provide fit-for-purpose support to facilitate
ongoing TD educational process innovation.
Team Members
Dr Glos Wing-Yan HO
Director and Principal Lecturer, Division
of Transdisciplinary Undergraduate Programmes
Hong Kong Baptist University
Dr. Glos Ho is the
Director and Principal Lecturer of the Division of Transdisciplinary
Undergraduate Programmes (DTUP), a university-level division at HKBU that
serves as a proactive hub for facilitating cross-faculty teaching and learning.
She designed and led the implementation of both the BA(Hons.) in Business
Administration (Global Entertainment) and the 9-unit flagship transdisciplinary
(TD) common core – Global Challenges. Her work in inter- and TD pedagogy, as
well as her innovations in student-as-partners initiatives, has inspired
colleagues to collaborate across disciplines. In 2024, Dr. Ho founded the
university’s student/staff Community of Practice (CoP) in TD teaching and
learning. She currently serves as Co-Chair of the Asia Regional Network of the
Global Alliance for Inter- and Transdisciplinarity (ITD Alliance).
Prof. Kingsley Siu-King NG
Associate Professor, Academy of Visual
Arts
Hong Kong Baptist University
Prof. Kingsley Ng
is the Programme Director of the BASc (Hons.) in Arts and Technology and an
Associate Professor at the Academy of Visual Arts. He is deeply committed to
participatory projects that benefit from both vertical integration—bringing
together students from diverse academic backgrounds—and horizontal integration,
which fosters transdisciplinary (TD) teamwork that is socially relevant and
transformative. As a media artist with extensive international and local
exhibition experience, Prof. Ng has not only contributed to the visual identity
and branding of the TD programmes but has also leveraged his broad network to
create abundant opportunities for students to apply TD knowledge in real-world
social contexts, both locally and globally.
Professor Nick Yin ZHANG
Assistant Professor, Department of
Journalism
Hong Kong Baptist University
Prof. Nick Zhang
is the Programme Director for the Bachelor of Arts, Science, and Technology
(Hons.) in Individualised Major and Assistant Professor, Department of
Journalism. He designed and taught the personalised pathway courses and led the
implementation of the first JUPAS individualised major programme in Hong Kong.
Drawing on his extensive industry and community networks and academic
background in both communication and computer science, Prof. Zhang championed
the setup of a joint-internship platform for all TD students and forged
partnerships with different industry and community partners, including Google
(Hong Kong), Tsz Shan Institute and etc.
Prof. Wendy Yajun HUANG
Professor, Academy of Wellness and Human
Development
Director, Dr. Stephen Hui Research Centre for Physical Recreation and Wellness
Hong Kong Baptist University
Prof. Wendy Huang is the Programme Director for BSocSc (Hons.) / BSc (Hons.) in Innovation in Health and Social Well-Being and a Professor at Academy of Wellness and Human Development, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences. As an RGC Research Fellow (RFS) dedicated to promoting active, healthy lifestyles, Prof. Huang uses her research to shape transdisciplinary teaching—bringing together health, behaviour, and technology—so students can investigate real-world challenges. She leads the evaluation of student learning and works closely with the team to design practical support and interventions for students who need them.
Fostering a Transdisciplinary Educational
Environment to Nurture Future-shaping Talent
Hong Kong Baptist University (HKBU)
proposed to the University Grants Committee (UGC) and received approval,
in November 2021, to launch four transdisciplinary (TD) undergraduate degree programmes
during AY2022-2025. Led by Professor William Cheung, Associate Vice-President (Transdisciplinary
Education) and Professor of Computer Science, a core Transdisciplinary Planning
Team of teaching innovators develops and implements the programmes: Dr. Glos Ho (Director and Principal Lecturer, Division of
Transdisciplinary Undergraduate Programmes),
Prof. Wendy Huang (Professor, Academy of Wellness and Human
Development), Prof. Kingsley Ng (Associate Professor, Academy
of Visual Arts), and Prof. Nick Zhang (Assistant Professor, Department of
Journalism).
Implementing TD education has ranged
from supplemental/co-curricular strategies to framing general
education courses. This portfolio highlights the teaching philosophy and
collaboration of our team, representing a vision of
core institutionalisation beginning with the new programmes: (1) BA
(Hons.) in Business Administration (Global Entertainment) (BAGE), (2) BSSc
(Hons.) / BSc (Hons.)
in Innovation in Health and Social Well-Being (HSWB), (3) BASc (Hons.) in Arts
and Technology
(ARTT), and (4) Bachelor of Arts, Science, and Technology (Hons.) in
Individualised Major
(BAScT). HKBU established a university-level division for facilitating
cross-faculty teaching and learning,
and created a set of signature TD courses, intentionally representing the
breadth of the university, and featuring our partnership with
students to co-create and apply TD knowledge in societal practice.
The team developed the White Paper of
Conceptualisation of Transdisciplinary Education. HKBU’s understanding of
TD education is the “transcendental” perspective. Illustrated here, TD
education covers the academic fields found in universities and the interaction
between academia, industry, and the various sectors that make up our society. TD
education also sees the disciplines and the interaction to be evolving
dynamically. TD is not just a combination or cross-fertilisation among
different disciplines. A new field, including new theories and new inquiry
methodologies, will emerge as a result. Approved by the Senate, the White Paper
is the guiding principle to develop the second generation of our plan: a new TD
undergraduate degree in BASc (Hons.) in Digital Futures and Humanities (DiFH),
alongside seven Transdisciplinary Second Majors, which institutionalises TD
education at a U-wide level.
HKBU Model of
Transdisciplinary Education
Challenges faced by humanity cannot be dealt with
by one discipline or sector. We need to adopt an ethos of ‘do whatever it
takes’ to tackle them. We acknowledge the simple fact that the world operates
as a completely integrated whole, regardless of how finely we have divided it
for study in the academy, or for “division of labour” among different sectors.
The diagram below features the components of our definition and our plan. Our
central tenets are adopting integrative learning (Klein, 2008) as
the educational goal and using progressive academic development in degree
programmes to provide students enough time/structure and adequate space for
self-exploration to achieve this maturity.
We cannot present four full programmes. We
illustrate below our integrative approach with examples from each year.
Generally, we foster TD learning through academic year courses, using a
spiral curriculum in which integrative learning experiences are revisited
with increasing depth, as advocated by Bruner (1960).
Year One: First
Step To Transdisciplinarity
The 9-unit Global Challenges I/II is HKBU’s
flagship TD course, taken by all first-year students in all degree programmes.
Recognising that secondary schools are focused on disciplinary approaches, our
team designed the course to acknowledge these silos as students transition to
university, developing students’ skills as translators of their own experiences
as they contemplate solving some of the world’s complex challenges, as
represented in the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Our framework consists
of three pedagogical stages: “Connection”, “Complexity”, and “Collaboration”,
derived from the Knowledge-Attitude-Behaviour (KAB) framework, which posits
that knowledge shapes attitudes, which in turn influence behaviours.
Connection: to make
interdisciplinary connections, synthesize ideas and perspectives. Students from
different backgrounds investigated sustainable clothing (SDG 12: Responsible
Consumption and Production). They carried out ethnographic fieldwork and
interviews in fashion boutiques followed by four fieldwork projects in Hong
Kong and Macau. They interviewed 12 faculty members from different disciplines,
integrating these insights to co-create innovative concepts, and produced 22
innovative educational resources for secondary schools.
Complexity: engaging with
stakeholders and community sectors to enhance TD understanding of global
challenges and broaden their perspectives. Exploring SDG 2 (Zero Hunger) and
SDG 3 (Good Health and Well-Being), our students collaborated with the local
charity Breadline, gaining firsthand experience in collecting and
redistributing bread to those in need. They had virtual dialogues with
international peers to comprehend global canteen structures and led innovative
food-making workshops for local high school students. Students integrated their
insights into 22 visual presentations on sustainable transcultural eating,
which were displayed as posters in campus canteens for six months.
Collaboration: Integrative learning includes adapting/applying skills acquired in one
situation to new ones. Students explored city structures in Hong Kong and
developed a sustainable guidebook using ethnographic field visits across 18
districts (SDG 11: Sustainable Cities and Communities). The students then spent
three days in Zhuhai, collaborating with peers from our Zhuhai campus (Beijing
Normal-Hong Kong Baptist University). They shared insights about regional
differences and co-produced 22 videos promoting cross-border urban
sustainability. Guidebooks were displayed in Central Market and featured on
World Wildlife Fund-Hong Kong (WWF-Hong Kong)’s website. The videos were
showcased on campus and are being used as teaching materials for future
cohorts.
In “GreenWash”, a student team designed an
interactive card-game to help consumers make informed choices. The team
received support from the HKBU Social Innovation Kick-Start Fund. Together with
three other groups, the students were invited by WWF-Hong Kong to showcase
their projects in the 2024 Sustainable Living Festival.
The Year 1 project “COLOURS” was featured at Hong
Kong InnoCarnival 2023. Students utilised sensors and digital tools to create
interactive experiences; the art installation offered visitors a unique
opportunity to explore the power of colours through the lens of technology.
Year Two/Three:
Transdisciplinarity Innovation
Students connect ideas and transfer concepts and/or
practices to new, complex situations within and beyond campus. Two pairs of
courses illustrate our design.
Year 2 Health Innovation and Well-being students
take two experiential learning courses, AI and Data Analytics for Health and
Social Innovation I/II, in which they apply these technologies to problems
of health and social well-being. Semester 1: students visited an elderly
centre, observing patients with dementia and their caretakers. Semester 2:
students developed seven smart solutions to address mental health, exercise,
and sleep problems for these populations through a pedagogical focus on
problem-solving, perspective-taking, and collaboration. Their work was
showcased in the Transdisciplinary Discovery Learning Commons in 2024.
A flagship project was Med*nap, a single-lead ECG
sleep monitor and facilitator that uses a supervised learning approach to
automatically classify the user’s sleep stages based on their ECG signal. The
project was showcased at the HKBU Principals’ Day 2025 and received the HKBU
Social Innovation Kick-Start Fund to track sleep quality and give users
personalised advice.
In “AI Moodcheck” adopts AI to understand emotions
through facial expression and recommend music that suits the mood of the moment
was invited to Po Leung Kuk Ho Yuk Ching (1984) College in 2024.
Partnering with Caritas Hong Kong, Year 3 students
in Arts and Technology and Global Entertainment Business take
Transdisciplinary Collaboration Studios I/II. Under the theme “Meaningful
Play!” they created interactive artwork for children, utilising technology to
craft fun games and immersive experiences that stimulate the senses and convey
important messages about dreams, career choices, and mental health.
Between the two semesters in 2024, our students
visited Bangkok, Thailand, to team with 20 Thai university students organised
by the School of Changemakers (SoC) and the Bangkok Art Biennale, focusing on
SDG 3 (Good Health and Well-being). The students collaborated on an exhibition
on using art as an effective tool for driving social change. The plight of
abandoned pets was highlighted in one interactive exhibit in which motion
sensors triggered animal sounds to emerge from innocuous trash heaps. The exhibition
was held in 2025 at The Jockey Club Campus of Creativity.
Year Four:
Transdisciplinarity Honors Project
As students enter their final year, they, like many
of their colleagues, undertake independent research or social innovation
projects and contribute original insights to their fields. In our programme,
the thinking for this project is structured into the curriculum starting in
Year One, as they define, explore, and refine the questions on which they wish
to work.
Our concept of TD
Education as a full curricular option does not end with courses and some degree
options. We are continuing to develop and implement new options to increase
participation
Individualised Major, the most flexible form of TD education at
HKBU. The Bachelor of Arts, Science, and Technology (Hons) in Individualised
Major, launched in 2022, is the first JUPAS-admitted undergraduate programme of
this kind in Hong Kong. Under the guidance of HKBU academic staff and community
advisors, students who are interested but do not fit inside traditional majors
can design their own, tailored to their specific academic interests and career
aspirations. These students work closely with Academic Supervisors (23 HKBU
faculty members) and 20 Community Advisors.
A U-Wide Transdisciplinary Second Major
enables students the mix & match option. In the Planning Exercise
Proposal 2025-28, HKBU proposed seven Transdisciplinary Second Majors and two
Second Majors, encouraging students to follow personal interests and be better
prepared for the future via combining different curricular components, majors,
and second majors.
Inspired by Littrell (2020), our team and other collaborators
developed a bilingual board game designed to simulate real-world scenarios
related to the 17 SDGs. The game will be embedded in a new core course, “Transdisciplinary
Inquires and Methodologies,” offered to students taking the Transdisciplinary
Second Major.
In the Global Transdisciplinary
Students-as-Partners Integration Tour, students co-create
educational resources. Our team developed a Global Transdisciplinary
Integration Tour Series for our students to encounter SDG issues beyond
Hong Kong. Our goal: students co-design the curriculum, co-create
learning resources, and teach. Collaborating with six overseas university
partners and three NGOs, our students examined global problems firsthand and
co-created teaching materials with faculty members. In our 2024 trip to Sydney,
14 HKBU TD students explored environmental issues as citizen scientists.
Supported by Western Sydney University (WSU) and aligned with SDG 14 (Life
Below Water), students traversed the South Creek and learned about
microplastics, riparian health, water bugs, and flooding.
With the ECF-funded Platform for
Student-generated Learning Resources, students can share educational
resources with the wider community. With the support of the Environment and
Conservation Fund (ECF) and WWF-Hong Kong, we provide an innovative digital
platform, the “Hong Kong TransLearn Bazaar”.
HKBU hosted the first Transdisciplinary Student
Conference in 2025, offering a platform for students to present their ideas
for tackling complex challenges. For instance, Ella Yu is developing a
personality trait scale to assess the suitability of AI companions in
addressing loneliness.
We are partnering with the HKBU Library to launch
the first student-led journal in TD, giving students a voice in academic
and research communities.
Lesson Learned and
Continuous Development
We have actively and consistently embraced
collaborative input as we create our emergent definition of TD education. We
used our White Paper to stimulate conversations at faculty, staff, and
student events, and held an on-campus Community of Practice to challenge
participants to think beyond their boundaries.
Outside HKBU, we have shared our vision and
listened to the conversations at over 10 universities and international forums.
We have introduced TD education to secondary school teachers and students. HKBU
is hosting the inaugural Pacific Asia Summit on Transdisciplinary Education
(PASTE) in June 2025.
Curriculum optimisation based on feedback from academic staff and students
is especially important. Feedback indicates that more room between TD signature
courses could allow students more time to integrate learning experiences.
Academic advising is critical for TD education as more flexible and personalised learning
pathways call for better guidance. An online/AI system supports each student’s
individual learning pathway, facilitating continuous reflection and informed
adaptation.
A Last Word
For us, TD education is not a veneer that overlays
the standard curriculum as a special topic of interest, a redefinition of
something we were doing already, or co-curricular option.
We have created degree programmes and options in
which “training in the field” is the beginning, and not the end, of an
education that prepares students to see global challenges as integrated,
multidimensional problems. Learning, as well as assessment, is contextualised
where the challenges occur in the real world.
EVIDENCE: THE IMPACT ON STUDENTS’ LEARNING
OUTCOMES
We adopted the American Association of
Colleges and Universities (AAC&U) VALUE Rubrics on Integrative Learning,
which includes five dimensions: i) “Connections to disciplines”, ii) “Connections
to experience”, iii) “Transfer”, iv) “Integrated Communication”,
and v) “Reflection and Self-Assessment”.
Overall, we identified four periods during
Years 1-3 (6 semesters) where students engaged in a 2-to-3-step progression of
projects in TD courses (e.g., Global Challenges), and applied the same
evaluation criteria to 104 student artefacts from the projects. If the 5
Integrative Learning scales are collapsed to a single value for each of the
four progression periods, we have two intriguing observations: (1) each of the
linked project sets shows improvement in Integrative Learning, and (2) the
general trend over Years 1-3 shows a satisfyingly positive trajectory, from
novice/apprentice to apprentice/proficient. Wickson and Carew (2014) advocate
using spider charts to visualise and compare performance when multiple scales
are used and for tracking progression over time. Two raters assessed the
student’s work.
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Transdisciplinary Core Course – ITS1008 Global Challenges I, ITS2009 Global
Challenges II We evaluated the 16 sustainable clothing projects in ITS1008
I (Year 1 Semester 1) and the 20 sustainable cities guidebooks in ITS2009
II (Year 1 Semester 2). The results are displayed in the chart (right).
Based on the t-test results, we observe significant improvements for the
rubrics “Connections to Experience” (p<0.05), “Transfer” (p<0.05), and
“Integrated Communication” (p<0.05). In “Connections to Discipline” and
“Reflection and Self-Assessment”, significant improvement is not observed, a
call to us for the future. |
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BAScT (Hons.) in 4/25/2025sed Major – ITS1019 Transdisciplinary Guided Study II,
ITS2019 Transdisciplinary Problem Solving II, and ITS3008 Transdisciplinary
Knowledge Transfer I. We evaluated all of the final projects: ITS1019
(Year 1 Semester 2), ITS2019 (Year 2 Semester 2), and ITS3008 I (Year 3
Semester 1). The results are displayed in the chart (right). From ITS1019 to
ITS2019, significant improvements were found in “Connections to Experience” (p<0.05)
and “Connections to Discipline” (p<0.1). Progressing from ITS2019 to
ITS3008, significant improvements are observed in “Connection to Discipline”
(p<0.05), “Transfer” (p<0.05), and “Integrated Communication” (p
<0.1).
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BSSc (Hons.) / BSc (Hons.) in Innovations in
Health and Social Well-being –COMP2035/2026
AI and Data Analytics for Health and Social Innovation I/II We evaluated
the 8 projects in COMP2035 I (Year 2 Semester 1) and the 7 from COMP2026
II (Year 2 Semester 2). The results are displayed in the chart (right).
The results reveal that for this Year 2 paired courses, significant
improvements in “Connections to Experience” (p<0.05), “Transfer”
(p<0.05), and “Integrated Communication” (p<0.05) are observed.
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BASc (Hons.) in Arts and Technology – ARTT3005/ARTT3006 Transdisciplinary
Collaboration Studios I/II We evaluated plans from ARTT3005 I
(Year 3 Semester 1) and the corresponding installation created in ARTT3006
II (Year 3 Semester 2). The results are displayed in the chart (right).
The results reveal that for the Year 3 paired courses, significant
improvements are observed for all five dimensions: “Connections to
Experience”, “Connections to Discipline”, “Transfer”, “Integrated
Communication”, and “Reflection and Self-Assessment”, with p <0.05.
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Discussion: Inasmuch as there is yet a consensus
for defining TD Education, higher education programmes need to create tentative
markers for assessing their learning outcomes. In our introduction, we
explicitly adopted Integrative Learning as our foundational definition: the
co-production process with students by integrating knowledge from diverse
disciplines and sectors, fostering innovation beyond traditional boundaries in
a progressive manner, and encouraging interaction between academic knowledge
and other sectors of society to address societally relevant problems. We
hypothesised that integrative learning skills would improve progressively, as a
student’s competency, and that we should focus on this skill as a longitudinal
measure across the TD core courses rather than waiting for a global, summative,
and speculative definition of TD education.
Another scale in the Integrative Learning rubric is social responsibility and civic engagement. We conducted focus groups with students in the Global Challenges course and Global Integration Tour, along with a content analysis from 1,215 reflection papers collected from 135 students during AY2023/24. The analytical results align with the Integrative Learning rubrics, featuring emphasis on interconnectedness of disciplines and SDGs (Connections to Discipline), ownership of learning (Connections to Experience), TD collaboration (Transfer) and (Integrated Communication), and self-growth/global citizenship (Self-Reflection) as emergent themes.
“Understanding
these [SDG] goals was like opening a window to a new world where each
discipline contributes to sustainability. This approach went beyond theoretical
exploration, and it effectively helped solve real-world problems.” –
HKBU student
“I have learned not to underestimate my power; I can also be the one who inspires others.” – HKBU student
Although we are still a year away from graduating the first class of students from the TD degree programmes, our initial results on their progress are promisingly consistent with our hypothesis, and not only show evidence to claim an increase in integrative learning, but also some useful pointers for improving our programme design.
EVIDENCE: PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT
The team has been gathering
inspiration and feedback from exemplary scholars across Europe, Asia, the
US, and Australia. In the early stages, Prof. Toru Ishida (Waseda University)
shared insights on designing a TD curriculum for first- and second-year
undergraduate students. Prof. Louise McWhinnie, Emeritus Professor and
inaugural Dean of the Faculty of Transdisciplinary Innovation at the University
of Technology Sydney, spent a month at HKBU in 2023 where she shared her
experiences in running Australia’s first university TD degree and met with the
team and other HKBU colleagues regularly to discuss observations and feedback
for improvement. Prof. Brian Coppola (University of Michigan) shared his
insights at a roundtable discussion on TD teaching from a US perspective, and
Prof. Eva Bendix Peterson from Roskilde University, Denmark, discussed the
adoption of inquiry-based learning in an interdisciplinary setting in higher
education in Northern Europe.
While intra-team development is
crucial for the smooth implementation of TD education at HKBU, the team’s
composition across various faculties and schools is equally vital to ensure
mutual learning, understanding, and communication. The governance structure of
TD education at HKBU requires team members to serve on critical committees,
such as Programme Management, Transdisciplinary Undergraduate Programmes Board,
and Assessment, where the latest programme developments, cross-faculty
collaborations, quality assurance, and student assessment and performance in
each TD programme are discussed.
With individual professional
development in their respective disciplines, as detailed in their CVs, each
team member brings unique disciplinary expertise and programme management
experience. This diversity sparks pedagogical innovation through varied thinking
approaches and teaching styles. For example, when the team co-designed and
co-taught the Global Challenges course and led the Global Integration Tour, the
diverse expertise enriched students’ learning. This collaboration also extends
to the team’s involvement in running and judging annual secondary school
contests.
In 2024, the team developed a White Paper on the Conceptualisation of Transdisciplinary Education, providing a framework for developing and implementing TD teaching and learning at HKBU. This not only benefited the team but also introduced a definition for TD education and its guiding principles within HKBU’s context during the Faculty Development Day. It was further shared with the School of Continuing Education during their Staff Development Day and with Beijing Normal-Hong Kong Baptist University at their AI-Integrated Curriculum Reform Task Force.
Beyond the HKBU campus, the concept of TD education was shared with department heads and research leaders at prestigious institutions.
A Community of
Practice (CoP) named TransdiscipliLink was established in 2024 to promote TD
collaboration in Hong Kong. This community initiated bi-weekly “TransColLab
Luncheons”, facilitating small group discussions. To date, these luncheons have
covered topics such as integrating mathematics into songwriting, utilising AI
for mental health, and applying visual arts to medical equipment, sparking
students’ creativity and encouraging them to think beyond disciplinary
boundaries.
Professor William Cheung delivered the keynote “Dance with the Digital Futures via Transdisciplinarity” at international forums such as the HKBU International Symposium on Humanities, Societies, and Digital Futures (2025), where Dr. Glos Ho served as the moderator, the Student Empowerment Forum at the Learning & Teaching Expo (2024), and the Innovation Forum for World College Students at Shanghai Jiao Tong University (2024), reaching over 100 international participants.
The Global Challenges course was shortlisted for the QS Reimagined Education Awards in Sustainability Literacy (2024). Dr. Glos Ho shared the teaching pedagogy with over 80 international participants in London in 2024. The progressive student-centred framework was also presented at the Interdisciplinary Learning and Teaching Conference in 2025, hosted by the London School of Economics. These teaching practices were also presented to 40 RPg students at HKBU, inspiring them to integrate TD education into their early careers.
In addition to 50 media articles
featuring interviews with TD students, students presented at conferences and
symposia.
To extend university education beyond tertiary
levels, the concept of TD education was introduced to secondary school teachers
and students. Supported by the HKSAR Education Bureau’s Business-School
Partnership Programme (BSPP), the annual Transdisciplinary Contest for Hong
Kong Secondary Schools was organised, attracting over 100 teams and more than
500 secondary school students over two years (2023-24). This initiative
provided a platform for secondary students to develop a TD mindset, fostering
innovative problem-solving skills and preparing them to be future-ready
leaders.
We are excited to note that HKBU will host the
inaugural 2025 Pacific Asia Summit on Transdisciplinary Education (PASTE) in
June 2025, bringing together TD colleagues from Japan, India, Korea, Singapore,
and Australia to exchange ideas, share best practices, and explore
collaboration on innovative TD teaching and learning strategies. The Summit
will be integrated into the secondary school teachers’ workshop as part of the
Transdisciplinary Secondary School Contest. At the end of the presentations,
secondary school teachers will share their initiatives in their respective
schools and co-create teaching and learning ideas with the speakers and BU
students.
