INTRODUCTION: Permaculture Workshops 5
Whatever your level of expertise, you can always invite or hire senior participants of
past Permaculture workshops and/or respected local experts or community members
with proven skills in specific areas – such as soil conservation, LEISA, small enterprise
development, or appropriate technology – to participate in leading the course as co-
facilitators, guest presenters, or assistants. This will enhance your course and its local
relevance. You will be responsible for ensuring that guest presenters cover their selected
topic(s) in the time provided in the lesson plan.
Remember to teach only what you know well and can demonstrate with ease.
Contact IDEP Foundation for information if you feel you need help to teach less familiar
techniques offered in this book.
Who attends Permaculture workshops?
Permaculture workshops are mainly intended for rural men and
women who make a living from farming small plots of land.
This means that many of them may have difficulty reading and
writing, or may lack confidence in their ability to learn.
If they have been educated through the formal school system,
which is dominated by rote learning, they will be unaccustomed
to engaging critical or creative thinking in a classroom setting. At the same time, they are
likely to possess a wealth of life skills and cultural knowledge, acquired through informal
family and community networks.
This often includes highly detailed knowledge of the flora and fauna, processes
and cycles of the local ecosystem, as a result of direct and continuous
interaction with nature.
Ideally, the participants selected for Permaculture workshops will come from all sectors
of the community in which the course is held. The best participants are those who are
ready, eager, and able to work towards positive change in their communities.
Local community and religious leaders and heads of women’s, farmers’, and youth groups
can have a powerful influence on the rest of the community and should be included as
participants whenever possible.
Participants from other areas and even other countries may improve the flavor of the
course by bringing fresh perspectives from outside the community, although in some
cases, the presence of foreigners may inhibit community members from fully participating
in classroom discussions.