The ISF Major offers highly-motivated students the unique opportunity to pursue an interdisciplinary undergraduate degree. But what does “interdisciplinary” mean? Disciplines (Economics, English, History, Political Science, Philosophy, and Sociology) are organized bodies of knowledge allowing for specific ways of seeing social reality. The problem is that disciplinary ways of seeing are also forms of blindness. For example, a focus on differences in political opinions might block the question, “Under what social conditions do certain groups of people come to have political opinions at all?” Similarly, a sophisticated explanation of prices may get in the way of asking the question, “Under what conditions do most things come to have a price?” Interdisciplinary questions are questions of these kind. They are a way of shifting perspective; of acknowledging the strengths of disciplinary knowledge, while probing its limits and occlusions. The ISF welcomes students bold enough to engage in these kinds of issues in a rigorous and empirically grounded way.
Students pursue the ISF degree in the context of a Research Field consisting of two elements: a Course of Study (a course program designed with the aid of a faculty adviser), and an originally researched Senior Thesis focused on a significant research problem in the social sciences or the humanities. Courses taken in the social sciences, the humanities, and/or the professional schools and colleges in addition the ISF’s own interdisciplinary methods course (ISF 189) constitute the Course of Study. The Senior Thesis (ISF 190) consists of a 30-40 page piece of original research and is the culminating product of the ISF degree.
This website identifies several Research Fields that have been of wide interest to students in the past. It is also possible for students to pursue Research Fields other than those listed on the program website in consultation with ISF faculty advisors. Research Fields should not replicate an existing major. Instead, the proposed Research Field must be interdisciplinary, integrating approaches from at least three academic disciplines (departments or programs). Student declaration forms must indicate a coherent Research Field and must include a manageable and significant research question answerable in a semester’s hard work (ISF 190). Each student’s proposed Research Field is discussed with and approved by a faculty adviser to assure feasibility, but the final responsibility for the declaration form is the student’s
The purpose of the ISF major is to allow undergraduates to combine work across disciplines in courses and with faculty where no other structured program exists. Students will be referred to American Studies if their proposed research topic is strictly American in nature, that is, research into American identity. Research questions in the social sciences and humanities that deploy data from the U.S. or Bay Area are welcomed and encouraged. Others will be referred to Economics, the Haas Business School Undergraduate Program, or Sociology, as appropriate.
The ISF Major emphasizes the role of the faculty adviser and the student-adviser relationship. Students are assigned an advisor upon acceptance into the major, although faculty members outside ISF may serve as advisers when appropriate, as approved by the ISF Director. For more on advising, see the Student Handbook.
Declaring the major
Students must consult an ISF faculty adviser before submitting the declaration form to discuss their proposed Research Field. Students who have senior standing (More than 90 units, excluding AP credit) must consult the Student Academic Advisor prior to meeting with a faculty advisor and declaring. The 90-unit maximum does not take into account in-progress units at the time of declaration. Final acceptance into the major depends on being able to finish the ISF major within L&S change of major and double major guidelines, and L&S EGT (Expected Graduation Term) policies.
Students may declare the major at any point during the semester (prior to the final day of classes) once they have:
1) Completed their first declaration requirement course with no less than a C grade and are currently enrolled in their second declaration course.
2) Had their research program approved by an ISF faculty advisor.
Final acceptance in the program will be contingent on receiving a grade of C or better in the second course and attainment of a 2.0 or higher GPA in all courses that apply to the major requirements, which include the declaration requirements, ISF Core requirements, and faculty-approved Course of Study classes.
ISF major requirements are outlined on this website, along with instructions to declare the major.