INTRODUCTION: Permaculture Workshops 17
end of the lesson, the participants will be able to describe 3 ways to conserve
water in their homes. By the end of the lesson participants will be able to
demonstrate the use of Permaculture principles in the design of a kitchen. By the
end of the lesson participants will be able to make 2 different kinds of compost.
- Learning activities: What kind and what sequence of activities will I use to
reach these objectives? E.g. large group presentations; creative thinking or
brainstorming exercises in small groups; field practice activities. - Procedures: What are the key points I want to cover in my presentation? What
are the key steps to carrying out this classroom exercise or field activity? What
instructions will I need to give to introduce and guide the activities? - Time: How long will each activity last? How much time do I have available for
this activity if I want to fit in the others as well? - Learning resources: What tools, materials, visual aids, or handouts are
needed? - How will the space be arranged?
- Anticipated problems and solutions: What might go wrong and how will I
respond? Is my lesson plan flexible enough? If people are tired or unresponsive,
do I have an energizer or other creative exercise to use as a backup? Or if a
particular lesson proves to stimulate a productive discussion, can it be expanded
to allow this process to come to a productive conclusion? - Self-assessment (to fill out after the lesson is finished): How well overall
did I achieve the objectives? Which aspects worked well? Which aspects didn’t
work as well as expected? What could I do to improve this session in the future?
After the course, this lesson plan will serve as a record of what you taught and a means
to evaluate your results so you can continuously improve the quality of your courses.
When designing your lesson plan, remember to:
- Ensure that at least 50% of the course is hands-on practice activities that are
appropriate to the situation and can be implemented using available space and
resources. - Keep classroom lectures brief and combine them with varied small group
dialogue, visual examples, and design tasks which let people integrate
information in a fun, relaxed manner. - Allow extra time for interpretation into a second language.
- Allow for flexibility - See Step 8: “Facilitating the course” for tips about how to
create effective learning environments and adapting your plan to respond to
participant feedback during the course.