Doing Is Learning
Interdisciplinary group work is collaborative, always with common purpose.
Think different but act together. Everyone owns the process.
For the short time together (four weeks, usually) cohort participants pledge to contribute fully, participate not spectate, consider and discuss the topic at hand, listen and question without judgment, and work equally towards the creation of new (or reconfirmation of current) thought.
A singular approach “what are we solving for” is everpresent as small ad-hoc group participants collectively aim to ultimately (one or more of these five focus areas) (1) promote health (2) prevent disease (3) provide care (4) practice compassion (5) prioritize innovation.