đ Skill Trees for a Post-Monetary Society
How Communities Map Abilities, Not Credentials
1. Introduction
In a post-monetary world, skills are not gatekept, monetized, or ranked by artificial scarcity. Skill Trees are the central tool communities use to visualize, coordinate, and grow human capabilities. They are decentralized, co-created maps that:
show what a learner can do,
show what a learner wants to do next,
connect people to mentors, co-learners, and apprenticeships, and
allow a community to understand its evolving capacities.
Skill Trees replace:
degrees
certificates
exams
standardized curricula
job requirements
Skill Trees reveal ability rather than proving credentials.
2. Structure of a Skill Tree
Each Skill Tree has four layers:
Layer A â Foundations
Basic competencies that enable participation in community life. Examples:
Communication
Collaboration
Self-regulation
Basic project literacy
Tools familiarity
Layer B â Core Domains
Broad, non-hierarchical fields of interest:
Arts & Creative Expression
Building & Material Skills
Ecological Stewardship
Care & Well-being
Technology & Systems
Culture & Humanities
Governance & Facilitation
Layer C â Capabilities
These are discrete abilities within each domain. Examples:
Carpentry: reading timber grain
Governance: mediating a two-person conflict
Ecology: identifying native vs invasive species
Arts: composing collaborative soundscapes
Capabilities are never ranked âbasic/intermediate/advancedââonly described.
Layer D â Projects
Real work done in community:
fixing a roof
cultivating a garden bed
producing a documentary
designing a composting system
facilitating a learning circle
Projects = Proof of Learning.
The portfolio records them; the Skill Tree maps them.
3. How Skill Trees Grow
Skill Trees are not fixedâthey evolve. Growth happens through three mechanisms:
A. Personal Branching
Learners add new nodes as they develop new abilities.
B. Community Branching
When multiple people converge on similar abilities, the community formally adds them as new branches.
C. Cultural Branching
Entire micro-utopias can share or merge trees, forming regional Skill Forests.
4. Why Skill Trees Prevent Credentialism
No institution controls the tree
No hierarchy ranks abilities
No exams gate access
No paper qualifications
No standardized path
Instead: Skills emerge from lived reality.
5. Implementation Guide
Start with 6â8 Domains.
Have each learner map their existing abilities.
Add new nodes whenever a capability appears.
Connect learners through overlapping branches.
Use portfolios to anchor the Skill Tree in real projects.
Review and refine every 6â12 months.
đ Weekly Learning Circles: Scripts, Prompts & Formats
1. Purpose of Weekly Learning Circles
Learning Circles are the heartbeat of education in micro-utopias. They:
keep learning social
ensure emotional grounding
allow cross-age collaboration
prevent fragmented or isolated learning paths
distribute teaching so that everyone becomes a mentor
They are not classes. They are coordination and reflection spaces.
2. Standard Weekly Format (90 minutes)
0â10 min â Arrival + Grounding
Prompt: âWhat energy are you arriving with today?â
10â25 min â Round of Updates
Each learner shares:
What they worked on
What went well
What they struggled with
What they want to do next
Prompt: âWhat felt meaningful this week?â
25â40 min â Skill Tree Check-in
Facilitator asks:
Any new capabilities to add?
Any branches shared by multiple learners?
Any community needs emerging?
40â70 min â Collaboration Planning
Small groups form around:
shared goals
shared challenges
complementary abilities
Prompts:
âWho is working on something similar?â
âWho needs help or a partner?â
âWhat small project could we start today?â
70â85 min â Reflection + Mentorship Requests
Everyone states:
what they commit to this week
what support they want
what support they can offer
85â90 min â Closing Ritual
Short gratitude or presence moment.
3. Roles
Facilitator (rotating weekly)
Timekeeper
Documenter (updates trees + portfolios)
4. Scripts for Special Circle Types
A. Project Launch Circle
Focus: turning ideas into actionable projects.
Prompts:
âWhat problem or need do we see?â
âWhat small experiment can we start?â
âWho wants to join?â
B. Conflict-Resolution Circle
Focus: surfacing tensions affecting collaboration.
Prompts:
âWhat is the underlying need?â
âWhat agreement would help?â
C. Creativity + Inspiration Circle
Light, exploratory.
Prompts:
âWhat inspired you recently?â
âShow-and-tell something that matters to you.â
5. Rules of Engagement
No interruptions
No critique unless invited
Transparency of needs
Collaborative problem-solving
Rotating facilitation to avoid authority accumulation
đ Community Apprenticeships: Structure & Practice
1. Definition
A Community Apprenticeship is a voluntary, project-based learning relationship where:
A learner joins an experienced community member
Work is real, not simulated
Apprentices make meaningful contributions
Knowledge flows horizontally
Apprenticeships replace internships, jobs, and vocational training.
2. Principles
No hierarchy
No wages (post-monetary)
No gatekeeping
No fixed duration
No formal evaluation
The only âcontractâ is mutual commitment.
3. Stages of a Community Apprenticeship
A. Invitation
Either party can initiate:
âIâd love to learn from you.â
âI could use help; want to apprentice with me?â
B. Orientation (1â2 meetings)
Cover:
project scope
expectations
safety
rhythm
handover points
autonomy level
C. Active Apprenticeship
The apprentice:
shadows
participates
gradually takes initiative
documents their learning in the Portfolio
The mentor:
demonstrates
narrates thinking
pairs on tasks
gradually steps back
D. Project Completion
The outcome is always a real project:
a repaired machine
a built structure
a performance
a community service
a designed system
a garden plot
E. Reflection + Branching
They meet to record:
new capabilities
new aspirations
new tree branches
next steps
4. Types of Apprenticeships
Craft-based (carpentry, ceramics, fabrication)
Ecological (farming, foraging, rewilding)
Social (caregiving, mediation, facilitation)
Technical (coding, systems design, renewable tech)
Cultural (music, storytelling, translation)
Governance (council work, logistics, planning)
5. Safeguards and Anti-Exploitation Measures
No exclusivity
No long-term dependency
Clear boundaries
Rotating mentors
Community oversight
Public reflection circles
Easy exit at any time
6. How Communities Coordinate Apprenticeships
A simple weekly bulletin:
âMentors offeringâŠâ
âApprentices seekingâŠâ
âProjects needing handsâŠâ
Self-organizing, zero bureaucracy.
7. How Apprenticeships Prevent Inequality
No one hoards knowledge
Mastery disperses naturally
Skills proliferate
Status cannot concentrate
A culture of gift-based learning emerges