Accredited Permaculture Training VET Programs

There is great opportunity for teachers and high schools to adopt new Cert I and Cert II Permaculture courses into Vocational Education and Training (VET) programs for Years 10, 11 and 12.
Permaculture is a framework to enable the design of resilient systems and to create sustainable, living, integrated systems based on ecological principles and earth caring practices.
Permaculture training is now embedded into the AHC Training Package  (Agriculture, Horticulture, Conservation and Land Management) and courses have been initially developed for delivery in WA. However, they are also able to be delivered anywhere in Australia through Registered Training Organisation (RTO) partnerships.
Skills Strategies International, based in WA, is able to auspice with schools anywhere in Australia and these courses are also available for purchase by other RTOs.
Cert I is most suitable for Education Support students, or those with learning difficulties, and Cert II for students who have aspirations of working within the agricultural and horticultural sector, but specialising in sustainable living practices.
These hands-on, student-centred courses engage students in the school garden where they learn life skills of growing, propagating and caring for plants, caring for animals, growing soil and undertaking organic practices to minimise their impact in the environment. While they are growing their vegetables, herbs and other plants, they may also be carrying out natural area restoration, recording weather, maintaining structures in the garden, preparing products and working safely when using and maintaining garden tools and equipment.
Teachers, or other school staff, will need to undertake four Cert III units in the Permaculture Demonstrator Skills Set for them to offer the Cert I in Permaculture course or at least a Cert III in Permaculture to deliver Cert II, unless they have already undertaken a Permaculture Design Course (PDC).
Permaculture Australia has information on its website that further discusses the requirements of schools and teachers.
Besides the Permaculture Demonstrator Skills Set, Skills Strategies International also offers face-to-face courses in Cert III and Diploma in Permaculture, as well as providing a mechanism to Recognise Prior Learning (RPL) for any of these courses. You may have the skills, abilities and knowledge to obtain a qualification without attending a class, as long as you can provide the evidence supporting your involvement as a permaculture practitioner. Online courses may be developed in the future.
To find out which other RTOs are able to deliver Accredited Permaculture Training at various levels please search training.gov.au.
For more information contact the Permaculture Australia Education team: education@permacultureaustralia.org.au
Article by Dr Ross Mars, Skills Strategies International.
 
 
 
 
 
 

Permaculture teachers training – reflection from Ballarat

It’s amazing how life leads you on particular paths – whether you call it destiny or a calling or a simple twist of fate. Halfway through my Permaculture Design Certificate course I realised that teaching this “stuff” is one of the things I would like to do in my new career. A few teacher training courses, both residential and on-line, drifted through my web sphere, but every time there was something in the way. Until suddenly, one day, the earth, moon and Saturn aligned and this one in Ballarat popped up. (Said alignment is very relevant in biodynamics.) In addition, Ballarat is a close neighbouring town to us, so besides the social significance, there’s also the reduction in travel as a plus point.

So, there I found myself in Ballarat on a balmy sunny Saturday afternoon, at Steve Burns’ Chestnut farm in White Swan road, outside Ballarat, together with a group of people almost as diverse as you can get, going through those awkward informal introductions, quietly wondering what I let myself in for. However soon we were sitting in the balmy sunshine enjoying a cup of tea, getting to know everyone in relaxed circumstances. He’s got a good selection of tea, our man Steve, not to mention his collection of home-made preservatives and elder flower cordial that he hides in a cold dry room under the classroom.

CN - classroom

Classroom setup at Chestnut farm

Our formal activities started with a tour of the inner part, let’s call it zones 1 and 2 and a bit of 3, of Chestnut farm. Instead of describing everything in detail, I will let the photos tell the story.

Our training started in earnest on Sunday morning at 8:30 sharp. From day 1, in our role as teachers, punctuality was, in typical permaculture style, understatingly emphasised and imposed, without you realising it was happening. Our classes started at Chestnut farm, but then were moved to Invermay community hall. The hall was much less farmy and a bit impersonal, but as the week carried on, it turned out to be a blessings in disguise. As a cold wet spell settled in for quite a number of days, the massive hall with its fully equipped kitchen and separate dining room came in very useful for breakaway sessions and even large group physical activities.

PTT - Lisa explaining menu

At Invermay hall, Lisa explaining the menu and where the food came from. We never went hungry, that’s for sure!

Our teachers for the course were Rosemary (Rowe) Morrow, amazingly experienced and widely travelled permaculture elder, teacher, speaker author and do-er, and Brenna Quinlan, multi-talented (that’s an understatement) illustrator and permaculture educator at Milkwood, while Steve Burns and Penny Tomes managed all the admin without a glitch (well, not that we were aware of… I’m sure behind the scenes they had their “fair share” to deal with.)

PTT - Rowe Morrow

What a privilege to work with and be taught by this inspiring, enthusiastic, spirited stalwart of permaculture – Rosemary Morrow

Never in my wildest dreams did I think I would encounter the term “meta“ outside of IT (where I’ve dealt with metadata since the nineteen-whatevers…). But a lot of our learning was based on meta-teaching, where we would teach ourselves using the methods and tools we were learning about. Using some seamless and at times hilarious co-teaching methods very effectively, Rowe and Brenna weaved us like mats between our roles as learners and teachers.

PTT - Rowe roll play

Rowe demonstrating role-play through doing role-play

One minute you would be absorbing an approach, and the next minute you would be using that same approach to convey some related (or totally unrelated) concept to your co-learners. All throughout the permaculture ethics, principles, theory, practices and so forth were emphasised and used as examples.

PTT - Bazza

Bazza – let’s call “him” our slightly (mmm…) bogan alter-ego.

It was so refreshing – coming from a very formal educational background and an industry where powerpoint dot-points are king – to go through six days of intensive training without a single slide. We experienced so many teaching styles and such a wide array of teaching tools!

PTT - Brainstorm

Our teaching methods brainstorm – which has become one of the token items of our class

As the course progressed, we did more and more micro-teaching – short little bursts of teaching, applying every thing we learnt, and even more. Rather quickly, the rallying call of the course became “micro-teaching is awesome!” (Mmmm… I should have made a little recording of that one – words can’t do it justice.)  I wonder if Brenna and Rowe knew what they let themselves in for when Brenna introduced the slogan? Because later almost everything became “awesome” (with a slight bazza-ish infliction).

PTT - awesome

Micro-teaching is…. awesome!

We ended the course by teaching a class to the whole assembly what our group-designed PDC syllabus would be, why it was good, the process followed and so on. What? teach? class? These five star performances resembled (and in some cases outshone) game shows, theme parks, TV shows (sir David Attenborough even made two appearances) and a Greek goddesses get-together to discuss what interventions are needed on earth (simulated grapes, wine, and authentic dress , headgear and all). I have to slip in a morsel of pride – we actually got the group to “teach” (convince) themselves why our syllabus and approach would be “awesome!” (oops, there it is again…)
Although, the course was full-on – 8:30am to past 9:00pm every day, plus some after- and before hours preparation – there were so many fun and energising activities in-between, the majority with a meta-teaching aspect built-in, that time flew and energy levels were pretty high most of the time.

This one is hard to express in words, so I’ll just put it brief – there was an absolutely fantastic amazing group of people on this course. Everyone pulled together, worked together, grew together with so much mutual respect and support. So to my now co-teachers, I just want to say an “awesome!” thank you and looking forward to co-teach with each of you somewhere were destiny, a calling or a simple twist of fate let our paths cross again.

PTT - Suchi and certificate

Receiving my certificate from Suchi – my co-teacher on our pairs assignment, who made me realise that even ethical money can be a fun topic

About martin@muchmoremulch.blog (101 Articles)
My name is Martin Rennhackkamp, I now live happily in Lara, Victoria, Australia with my wife, two children and two dogs. My interests, apart from the obvious Organic, Biodynamic and Permaculture Gardening and Farming, include sustainable living, surfing, horse-riding, a wide variety of music, dancing, nature, birds, reading, Christianity and a few other things which I never get to…

Member Update – CERES Community Environment Park in Melbourne

CERES are excited to host some powerhouses of Permaculture in Spring 2018. Robin Clayfield will be visiting over two days in November to share her skills and experience in facilitation and group dynamics. Robin has pioneered social Permaculture and dynamic decision-making around the world and brings her passion for creating deep change through effective, dynamic group work and co-operation between groups. More info and to book: Social Permaculture and Dynamic Group Decision Making
Rosemary Morrow is one of Permaculture’s pioneering women. For almost 40 years Morrow has worked extensively with farmers and villagers in Africa, Central and South East Asia, and Eastern Europe. She has especially dedicated much work to the people of war-torn nations such as Vietnam, Cambodia, Bosnia and Afghanistan. This two-day workshop on 8th & 9th of December focuses more on personal and group skills than growing plants, however the natural environment is always considered: Challenges & New Frontiers in Permaculture
Besides lots of other short courses in between, CERES’ 26th Permaculture Design Course starts on Wed 6th Feb 2019. The course is a mix of classroom presentations, workshops, design exercises, practical exercises and visits to properties to see Permaculture in action as well as a catered weekend away. The course content and approaches to teaching and learning is directed by a group of leading PDC teachers and practitioners. This 100 hour course is delivered by a range of professional, practicing permaculturists including David Holmgren, Joel Meadows, Kat Lavers, Donna Livermore, Peta Christensen and Earthcare Permaculture’s Graeme George. Payment plans can be arranged. More info and to book your: Permaculture Design Course

A Gift from Timor-Leste

The Tropical Permaculture Handbook by the Permatil (Permaculture Timor-Leste) NGO in East Timor has been completed after years of dedicated work by a team of authors, editors and content contributors, led by Ego Lemos and Lachlan McKenzie, working together with East Timorese illustrators.
Other partners involved in the production are xpand Foundation (an Australian social enterprise working predominantly in Timor-Leste) providing governance advice and project management, Disruptive Media (providing design and strategic communications for the NFP/NGO sector) who provide all the graphic design, marketing and media content and Kargan Media who designed, built and manage the website.
Permaculture Australia also assisted, through the Permafund committee, by supporting a variety of funding contributions. Many other individuals and organisations have made contributions in various ways to keep the project ticking over.
Ego Lemos and Lachlan McKenzie presented the Guidebook project at APC 14 in Canberra, where it received generous support. In the above photo left to right: Lachlan McKenzie, John Champagne, Ego Lemos, David Holmgren and Costa Georgiadis discussing the Guidebook at APC14.
On the 1st of October 2018 the English online edition was launched. This has raised substantial interest and been well received with orders from over 80 countries in only one month. In India, where Ego and Lachlan presented last year at the IPC 13, it has been most popular, and can hopefully be an important contribution to their fast-growing permaculture and agro-ecology movements.
Next Steps
The Tropical Permaculture Guidebook International Edition has been updated and written in English. This provides broad access to the guidebook, however for most tropical countries English isn’t the national or working language. This is especially true in rural areas.
The next step is to translate and re-create the guidebook in many languages. Currently fundraising and translating has started for the Tetum language version, for the guidebook’s ‘home’ country, Timor-Leste. Next are Spanish, Portuguese and French – prominent regional languages in the tropical countries, and there are many national and even sub-national languages as well.
An English edition of the Tropical Permaculture Guidebook will be printed and distributed when 100 orders have been received. The printed edition can be ordered on the website. It will be available first in Australia, with other countries and regions to follow.
About the guidebook
The Tropical Permaculture Guidebook builds on the success of their original Guidebook published in 2008. It focused on East Timor whereas the new, greatly expanded edition applies to tropical regions globally. “The core ethos and vision of the original book is retained and enhanced in this new edition, providing practical knowledge to anyone who reads it, especially in poor, low literacy and disadvantaged communities.”
The Tropical Permaculture Guidebook is a comprehensive resource of permaculture design, food sovereignty and environmental regeneration strategies. “Designed as a training, program and project base as well as a practical reference guide which can be used by a wide range of organisations, it will improve the results of all  permaculture/non-permaculture projects and is a complete tool for farmers and communities.”
The Guidebook has been divided into three volumes: Permaculture & People, House and Garden and Regenerative Agriculture. The three sections are available for download individually or the Guidebook can be downloaded as a complete volume.
The Guidebook is provided online on the basis of “access for all” and is available at no cost for people and organisations that cannot afford to pay while those who are able are asked to ‘pay what you can’.  All money raised will go toward further developing this project.
We encourage you to explore the Tropical Permaculture Guidebook and support this worthwhile project.
 

Member update – 150 PDC milestone

Robyn Francis celebrated the teaching of her 150th Permaculture Design Course (PDC) that happened on July 7-21, 2018 at Djanbung Gardens in Nimbin. Permaculture Australia would like to add its congratulations.

Robyn has taught 150 PDCs in 15 different countries, plus as many advanced courses in diverse areas of professional permaculture practices including Teacher Training; Community Facilitation; Ecovillage Design; Sustainable Aid and Development;  Social Permaculture; Design for Food Security, and Year-round Food Production. She was one of the key instigators of the Accredited Permaculture Training and has spent 11 years providing full-time accredited vocational training in Permaculture Certificates III, IV and the Diploma of Permaculture. Now thousands of her graduates are doing important work in all continents and climates. Robyn was mentored by Bill Mollison and co-taught with him in the 1980’s.
Robyn has been on the Board of Permaculture Australia for many years and contributed countless hours of her time to the organisation. Thank you!
Here is a video describing Robyn’s work and some thoughts about permaculture:
https://vimeo.com/100972877