How to change courses webinar - SIGN UP Loading...

Secure a place for the How to change courses webinar

馃搮 July 30, 2025 鈥 1:30 pm 鈥 Malaysia (GMT +8) 鈥 Online
11 a.m. Mumbai, 12 p.m. Ho Chi Minh City, 3 p.m. Sydney
Limited Registration Closes In:
0 Days 00 Hours 00 Mins 00 Secs
Insider tips and direct guidance through Q&A
Learn how to avoid common mistakes
Scholarships and financial aid opportunities

    Only 24 spots Available.

    糖心vlog官网

    Simon Fraser 糖心vlog官网
    Promoted by Simon Fraser 糖心vlog官网

    Fine-tuning the art of interdisciplinary study

    Every global industry seeks growth and innovation. From business studies to the arts, those at the cutting-edge of their fields feel ever-mounting pressure to expand their expertise and creative contributions. In response to the experimental successes of , STEM subjects (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) are now increasingly taught together to introduce students to a range of聽 theories and methods that encourage innovative thinking.

    Heidi Hayes Jacobs, of the Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development (ASCD), that interdisciplinary teaching produces well-rounded graduates who add value to the workforce.

    鈥淲e are coming to recognize that we cannot train people in specializations and expect them to cope with the multifaceted nature of their work,鈥 she says.

    The Department for Business, Innovation and Skills (BIS) also supports this claim stating that there is a demand for graduates with interdisciplinary specialities and , which embodies the ability 鈥渢o recognise the value of new, external information, assimilate it and apply it to commercial ends.鈥

    Graduates seeking to maximize their professional prowess would be wise to choose a 糖心vlog官网 that values an integrated approach to learning. The Faculty of Communication, Art and Technology at is well-known to take this approach

    Simon Fraser 糖心vlog官网

    Image courtesy of Simon Fraser 糖心vlog官网

    The Faculty of Communication, Art and Technology at Simon Fraser 糖心vlog官网

    Ranked among the and named #66 in the World鈥檚 Top 100 Universities, Simon Fraser 糖心vlog官网 (SFU) is Canada鈥檚 leading engaged 糖心vlog官网. With campuses in , and , the multi-campus 糖心vlog官网 is spread across British Columbia鈥檚 attractive coastal cityscapes.

    At SFU, the Faculty of Communication, Art and Technology (FCAT) exemplifies SFU鈥檚 commitment to discovering new frontiers in 鈥榠nnovative education, cutting-edge research and community outreach鈥. It is made up of five Schools: the , the , the , , and the .

    The faculty鈥檚 diverse curriculum is highly-desirable among graduates aiming for esteemed professions in the creative industry. FCAT programming delivers subject-material that 鈥榗ombines the science of human experience, the analysis of media and culture, the creation of original and experimental works of art, and the implementation of new technologies鈥.

     

    Simon Fraser 糖心vlog官网

    Image courtesy of Simon Fraser 糖心vlog官网

    Students also benefit from experiential hands-on practice in their respective fields via the and through working relationships with key industry leaders. FCAT co-op students have received placements at Facebook, Google, Electronic Arts, and many other established companies. To learn more about FCAT students and the interesting work they are doing, visit the .

    A faculty of 鈥榯hinkers, makers, and doers鈥, the staff and students at FCAT embrace the spirit of exploration 鈥 the driving force of the faculty鈥檚 dedication to interdisciplinary excellence.

    FCAT Innovation Leads to Slam Dunk in Big Data Technology

    Simon Fraser 糖心vlog官网

    Image courtesy of Simon Fraser 糖心vlog官网

    Using big data research, Peter Chow-White, professor and director at Simon Fraser 糖心vlog官网鈥檚 School of Communication and his team at GeNA Lab have developed an innovative system that聽gives basketball teams a competitive advantage. This performance tracking and analysis tool rivals the ones used by some professional teams in the National Basketball Association (NBA).

    Inspired by the Michael Lewis book and Aaron Sorkin film聽Moneyball, Peter鈥檚 system helps identify structural patterns in basketball games. 鈥淲e often see the world as a chaotic movement of people and things 鈥 but what science wants to do is find some sort of pattern within the chaotic mess,鈥 says Peter. 鈥淗umans are creatures of habit and there are a lot of underlying patterns in what we do. Whether it鈥檚 how we talk to each other or how we organize traffic,聽big data helps instrument the world. If we capture the way things, people or objects move, we can then analyze what they are doing. If we can analyze what they are doing, then hopefully we can find ways to predict what they are going to do next.鈥

    Peter鈥檚 interest in basketball is personal. He played university basketball and continues his passion for the game by coaching kids in elementary and high school. Peter was able to bridge academics and athletics in a unique way through his personal and professional interests. 鈥淚 was interested in some very core questions about communication technology. How do we use the symbolic world and how does the symbolic world use us? How do we create the world around us through communication as agents of change in our own personal worlds?鈥 In a time when public interest was centered on front-end technology (deciphering the images and words displayed on screens), Peter was interested in learning what went on behind the scenes. 鈥淒igital infrastructures are incredible databases. I wanted to know how this information was being used to organize the social world without us even knowing it.鈥

    During his research project on the role of communication in the adoption of 鈥榤oneyball鈥 in the NBA, Peter met Alex Rucker, head of analytics for the Toronto Raptors at the time and now vice-president of analytics and strategy for the Philadelphia 76ers. Peter found their conversations fascinating, but limited as Alex could only speak generally due to the proprietary nature of the Raptor鈥檚 data. Instead, Peter suggested they talk about his own basketball data, which he didn鈥檛 actually have at the time, but shortly after, partnered with the SFU men鈥檚 team coach to begin working on his innovative analytics system.

    Working closely with SFU鈥檚 basketball teams, Peter meets weekly with coaches to provide in-depth game reports. These reports show coaches important trends and provide opportunities to assess the performance of teams and players. In addition, Peter and his lab collect data on every team in the Great Northwest Athletic Conference (GNAC), mining for signals and providing SFU teams with a competitive advantage. They also conduct big data analysis on the 2000+ men鈥檚 and women鈥檚 basketball teams in all three National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) divisions.

    Is big data the key to developing a winning team? Peter explains: 鈥淯sing big data helps us see our work differently. It helps us find structure within all the noise so that when we make decisions, we can make them based on objective observations. Data is helpful but it doesn鈥檛 turn a low-performance team into a high-performance team. The job of data is to help coaches see things they wouldn鈥檛 otherwise see, confirm what they do see and challenge what they think they鈥檝e seen.鈥 This is exactly what聽聽helps us accomplish. KEY brings people together in a collaborative environment to make sense of big data and deliver innovative, real-world insights.

    As for future plans, Peter and the GeNA Lab are enthusiastic about their newest partnership with Canada鈥檚 women鈥檚 national soccer team 鈥 a high-level team who views their success intimately related to data analytics.

    Follow FCAT on , , and

    Liked this? Then you鈥檒l love these鈥

    Leading Creative Arts and Communication Schools in North America

    Graduate outcomes for creative students