When you are deciding which IB subjects to use as the lenses for your WSEE topic, you should consider the four different aspects of any academic discipline:
Disciplinary inquiry is purposeful
Targeted inquiries also serve specific purposes. Concepts and findings in one discipline are often applied in another, new context to solve problems, create products or explain phenomena.
Questions to ask:
When you are considering whether to include a specific discipline in the design of your research, you should ask yourself:
Disciplines hold a rich knowledge base (concepts and findings) on which to draw.
Disciplinary understanding involves the capacity to move flexibly between theories, concepts and specific examples. For example:
Questions to ask
When you are considering the range of disciplines available to you to form the basis of your research, you should ask yourself:
All disciplines have preferred methods—modes of inquiry and criteria by which knowledge is deemed acceptable.
For example:
Different disciplines also hold distinct criteria for determining what is an acceptable result or a trustworthy conclusion. In their interdisciplinary research, students must use the inquiry methods of at least one of the disciplines they study.
Questions to ask
When you are considering the range of disciplines available to you to decide which of their methods to use, you should ask yourself:
Disciplines have preferred forms of communication.
For example:
Each activity employs a particular form or style in order to communicate with its audience effectively. Disciplines favor the symbol system and form that suit their content and meet the standards or model that their expert community expects to see.
When you are doing academic writing, you will communicate the most effectively when you are reflecting such disciplinary standards. When you are preparing to write your EE, take a look at the models of communication typical of the disciplines you are relying on.
Questions to ask
WSEE Subject Guide and worksheets
RRS (Researcher's Reflection Space)
RPPF (Researcher's Planning and Progress Form) examples:
Check the Extended Essay guide for specific guidance on completing the various steps in the research and writing process of the EE, and these documents: