Quiet design. 12 simple design principles.

Share:
Pin Share

In my purse, stashed in behind two photos of my children, is a scrap of paper with the only design principles that have ever made sense to me. Twelve simple principles as an antithesis, to a sea of educational and instructional design frameworks, some of which need maddening interrogation to explain or understand. Twelve simple principles that seem to work, whatever I throw at them.

They are understandable, no matter what your experience in life.

You can use them to approach anything. You can navigate them as a simple list, or delve deep into thick well-thumbed books and frequently cited journal articles.  There is probably even a waiting  list in your local public library for copies of these books.

They are design principles that you can intellectualise or philosophise as you please.

They can be the cleverest thinking tool and yet can also spawn you a robust do list.

You can skim the surface of them, and build immediately. Or, you can approach them as theory and dwell on them.

Flexible. Holistic. Adaptable. Sustainable. Usable. Accessible.

They have become my personal and professional principles – they seem to fit life and learning. Not perfectly, no, nothing is ever a perfect fit. But enough.

As thought principles, they were co-conceived, by two very different minds, with two vastly different personalities, who were not the wizened sages we sometimes expect such thinking to emerge from. They were relatively young, in their early 20s, in a young country, which is generally not seen as one of the historic intellectual powerhouses of the world.

Shared slowly and informally through community, these principles are still shared primarily on the energy of individual enthusiasm,  now right across the world.  They also can be navigated more formally in books, textbooks, and formal courses, as theory and practice, and alone or guided by various leaders bringing their own personalities into our explorations of the principles.  This continual cycle shares the fundamental ideas based on that thinking of those original co-creators. Sometimes these approaches are at odds with each other, but this is part of adaptability, growing almost in the underground – surviving and thriving in constant change and chaos, for new and perhaps, unexpected audiences.

So, ahem, yes, ok….it’s permaculture.

Emerging from the 1970s, and Australia, these principles are still sometimes viewed as a bit of a sub-culture, mostly for those seeking an alternative to modern life, but if you never look further because this doesn’t appeal to you, I think you are missing an opportunity to be surprised.  Despite the fact that permaculture “emerged from within academia  and suffers only from a perception of lack of intellectual rigour, and the populist image..”. (*), these principles are still mostly pigeon-holed as ecology or organic gardening.

If you have only seen the popular visible face of permaculture, and you think that digging soil and planting veggies is not your thing, please,  just urge and nudge that thread of thinking aside, the bit that says…outside of my sphere…not in my domain…not my scene… because that is just one side, the practical side of permaculture.

Have you delved much into its rich and fertile theory?

There is SO much beneath the surface, so very rhizomatic. These are not merely principles for growing vegetables.

Unfurl your mind, to the very frontiers of your thinking:

As a holographic thinker – being open to the idea that anything one observes anywhere is likely to have parallel expressions everywhere – I am led to go beyond the usual boundaries that are put around permaculture….I encourage you to similarly try applying these Permaculture Principles to any area that might benefit from such holistic design theory and practice. Areas that immediately come to mind include human settlements and business enterprises, political and economic systems, and the health field, child rearing and learning environments.

Professor Stuart B. Hill, Foundation Chair of Social Ecology, University of Western Sydney, NSW Australia in Permaculture: Principles & Pathways Beyond Sustainability

The 12 design principles

Try using the 12 design principles of permaculture. Don’t worry about reading the “official” definitions, yet., or dwelling on each individually. Shape them to your needs.

Just try them as a thinking tool, when you are thinking about something that ignites your mind and soul.  Did they work for you?

Permaculture Design Principles

  1. Observe and interact.

  2. Catch and store energy.

  3. Obtain a yield

  4. Apply self-regulation and accept feedback.

  5. Use and value renewable resources

  6. Produce no waste

  7. Design from patterns to detail.

  8. Integrate rather than segregate

  9. Use small and slow solutions.

  10. Use and value diversity.

  11. Use edges and value the marginals.

  12. Creatively use and respond to change.

 


(*) Permaculture: Principles & Pathways Beyond Sustainability by David Holmgren.

Co-founders of Permaculture: 

Share:
Pin Share

8 thoughts on “Quiet design. 12 simple design principles.”

    1. Thanks for this Vanessa. These ideas have been brewing heartily for sooo long like a compost tea and I was a bit surprised to find #rhizo15 helped me explore them. I’m trying to start out and keep really accessible, without running off to journals and books too early. I feel like I want to share lots and lots of content and resources on the links between ecological thinking and learning – but, as much as our academic love of the long referenced paper, I think, it can sometimes mean those of us in education, find ourselves stuck in our niche a little bit. I’m hoping that few years from now, I’ll look back on my posts that started with #rhizo15 blogging and see the PhD I thought I wanted to write. Sort of a like an organic, slow-release, rhizomatic PhD by blog posts? 😉

  1. super. elegant simplicity too. I’ve been following Australian permaculture since I started local community blogging — before MOOCs

    1. Thanks Tania, this is what I LOVE hearing, and so much of the #rhizo15 experience was that wonderful mash up of different ideas, some of which I had never heard of. I love discovery. 🙂

  2. Thanks for your comments and shares. Permaculture seems to me like the binding drawing together a lot of the ideas that emerged from thinking about rhizomatic learning in #rhizo15. My educational theory wellsprings are rarely from specifically educational thinkers and sometimes I wonder if I am just off on a tangent. But I can see that Satish Kumar’s ideas around ecology needing to be present in all disciplines of higher education, mythologist and storyteller Martin Shaw and the ecological imagination, and even George Monbiot’s ideas around the need for rewilding of our ‘ecological boredom’ can also be thought of as a sort of learning boredom. The origins of how we learn surely began with natural systems, we learned in response to nature. So therefore, any talk of open education – education in the open, looking at our educational institutions that perhaps sever us from our most important muse – community and nature, those natural patterns, could and should look at ecological design? Permaculture might be a good framework to begin because it’s brilliantly flexible and holistic. That’s how it weaves together in my head at the moment. 😉

Share your thoughts....