What is Sustainability?
History of Sustainable Practices
Intro to Design Thinking
Systems Thinking In Design
Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
Life Cycle Thinking
100

This concept means meeting our needs today without preventing future generations from meeting theirs.

sustainability

100

Native Americans practiced this technique, setting small fires to prevent larger wildfires and restore soil nutrients.

controlled burns

100

What are the five stages of design thinking?

empathize, define, ideate, prototype, and test

100

This type of thinking looks at interconnected parts and feedback loops rather than isolated problems.

systems thinking

100

The UN adopted these 17 interlinked objectives in 2015 to achieve a better future for all.

Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

100

This approach examines a product’s environmental, social, and economic impacts from creation to disposal.

lifecycle thinking

200

These are the three pillars of sustainability.

environmental, social (people), and economic

200

The “Three Sisters” refers to planting corn, beans, and this crop together for mutual benefit.

squash

200

This visual tool captures what a user says, does, thinks, and feels about a problem.

empathy map

200

This type of feedback loop amplifies change in one direction, like a snowball effect.

reinforcing loop

200

This SDG aims to ensure inclusive and equitable quality education for all.

SDG 4: Quality Education

200

The five stages of a product’s lifecycle are raw materials, manufacturing, distribution, use, and this final stage.

end-of-life

300

This type of sustainability includes renewable energy and conserving resources like water and land.

environmental sustainability

300

This 1962 book by Rachel Carson revealed the dangers of pesticides and helped launch the modern environmental movement.

Silent Spring

300

These three words start questions that help reframe challenges into opportunities for solutions.

How Might We

300

This type of loop stabilizes systems, like a thermostat adjusting room temperature.

balancing loop

300

This SDG calls for urgent action to combat climate change and its impacts.

SDG 13: Climate Action

300

This linear model is often described as “take-make-waste.”

cradle-to-grave

400

This outdoor gear company became a “benefit corporation” in 2012 and donates 1% of sales to environmental causes.

Patagonia

400

This landmark 1987 UN report provided the most widely used definition of sustainable development.

Brundtland Report

400

This brainstorming rule encourages people to generate as many initial ideas as possible, rather than focus on how good the ideas are. (3 words)

quantity over quality

400

These are small areas in a system where a tiny change can make a big impact.

leverage points

400

This SDG focuses on ensuring access to affordable, reliable, and clean energy.

SDG 7: Affordable and Clean Energy

400

This circular model designs products for reuse and recovery, eliminating the concept of waste.

cradle-to-cradle

500

This car company’s mission is to “accelerate the world’s transition to sustainable energy” through electric vehicles and solar power.

Tesla

500

This 1989 oil spill in Alaska released 11 million gallons of crude oil and devastated wildlife.

Exxon Valdez spill

500

The motto “Fail fast to succeed sooner” best describes this stage of Design Thinking.

prototyping

500

This diagram type visualizes how variables affect one another with reinforcing and balancing feedback.

causal loop diagram

500

This product, designed for rural communities, lets users roll 90 liters of water instead of carrying it.

Hippo Water Roller

500

These lifecycle stages contribute more than 20% to overall impact.

Environmental hotspots

600

This clothing industry model produces trendy, cheap clothing quickly, but causes major environmental and social harm.

fast fashion

600

This 2015 international agreement united nearly 200 countries to limit global warming to well below 2°C.

Paris Agreement

600

This principle of universal design ensures that a product communicates necessary information to ALL users.

perceptible information

600

This systems archetype describes when individuals deplete a shared resource, harming everyone.

tragedy of the commons

600

This packaging alternative, made from agricultural waste and mushroom mycelium, composts in just 45 days.

Ecovative Mushroom Packaging

600

According to research, a reusable stainless steel water bottle becomes environmentally superior to a plastic bottle after this many uses.

15–20 uses