“…As TPCs broaden their response to the field’s calls for conducting interdisciplinary research, new implications about TPCs’ professional status emerge. Prior research has documented the impact of various factors on the achievement of professional status (Kynell-Hunt & Savage, 2003, 2004) such as the challenges TPCs face when demonstrating their value to organizational work (Johnson-Eilola, 1996; Mead, 1998; Redish, 1995), the assumedly support nature of TPCs’ work (Paretti, McNair, & Holloway-Attaway, 2007; Zachry et al., 2001), the location or placement of a program’s disciplinary home (Maylath, Grabill, Gurak, 2010; Yeats & Thompson, 2010) or even lack thereof (Harlow, 2010), and the variety and inconsistency of names used to identify TPCs and their work (Johnson-Eilola, 1996; Moore & Kreth, 2005; Slack, Miller, & Doak, 1993). These issues persist today, but when assessed in the context of interdisciplinary research, the quality of those issues undergoes a temporal and agential shift.…”