The Designers Accord Educational Toolkit: What does it really take to encourage sustainable practice?

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pemHow can we start thinking about sustainability as intrinsic part of good design, instead of an addendum?/p

pHow can we embrace the potential impact of our craft to design new services, shape organizational behavior, and enable policy change, not just churn out artifacts? /p

pHow can we assume accountability for what our designs influence, and not just the design itself?/em/p

pThese are the questions many of us have been asking constantlymdash;and answering with only with limited successmdash;for years. I am reminded of the confusion designers have around this topic each time I publicly speak about sustainabilitymdash;the first comment from the audience during Q+A is always the same: “Tell us what to do!” We are a profession who spends our entire lives generating new ideas, challenging the status quo, and building glorious concepts from nothing, yet remarkably we are paralyzed when confronted with the issue of how to meaningfully engage in the most important issue of our time./p

div class=”article_quote” One of the best ways we can advance our mission to practice sustainable design is to make sure the next generation of designers will graduate with a value system that reflects the new realities of our profession./div

pThis is the challenge the Designers Accord sought to address when it started 3 years ago. The concept was simple: if designers, educators, and business leaders could openly share knowledge and experience about sustainability, we would collectively (and more quickly) build our intelligence around these issues, and then generate more innovative and world-changing ideas./pa href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/featured_items/the_designers_accord_educational_toolkit_what_does_it_really_take_to_encourage_sustainable_practice_17329.asp”(more…)/a
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