When schools say they are “doing design thinking,” they often mean something narrow. They mean empathy interviews, sticky notes, prototypes, iterations, workshops, and perhaps a more modern vocabulary around innovation. Those tools have their place, and they can certainly be useful. But they are not the center of the matter.
Design thinking, at its best, is not a bag of techniques. It is a disciplined way of making coherent choices under real constraints. It asks a harder set of questions: What kind of human being are we trying to form? What do we believe about learning? What do we truly value, beyond slogans? What evidence will convince us that growth is taking place? And do our daily structures support those aims, or quietly undermine them?
In a school, that is the real work. Not novelty for its own sake. Not one more initiative. Coherence.
A simple and useful way to see this clearly is to separate every school concept into two layers:
Design values: the deep commitments and theories that govern decisions.
Design elements: the visible structures, routines, environments, programs, policies, and artifacts that make those commitments visible.
This is not tidy labeling for its own sake. It is a practical safeguard. One of the most common failures in education is to adopt impressive-looking elements—a new curriculum, a maker space, a behavior program, a device initiative, a project-based learning model—without asking whether those pieces actually fit the school’s view of the human being, the purpose of education, and the nature of learning. That is how schools become collections of initiatives rather than coherent institutions.
A maker space can support wisdom or vanity. A behavior system can cultivate self-governance or mere compliance. A technology program can widen learning or narrow it. An assessment model can illuminate growth or flatten the child. The element itself does not save the school. What matters is whether the element is aligned with the values.
The hidden operating system: four categories of design values
In my view, four value categories control the whole school.
1) Philosophy: the “why” beneath the mission statement
This is the school’s foundational stance on what education is for, what kind of person it seeks to form, what kind of society it hopes to contribute to, and what should never be sacrificed in pursuit of “success.”
A school that cannot name its philosophy clearly will usually default to whatever pressures are loudest: tests, marketing, convenience, parental anxiety, or imitation of whatever appears fashionable. That is not leadership. That is drift.
2) Theory of capabilities: the “who” the learner is
This category answers a decisive question: what do we believe human beings are capable of becoming?
Every school carries an implicit capability map, even if it never writes one down. Some schools say they value the whole child, but in practice recognize only one narrow kind of intelligence. Others speak about creativity, leadership, or spirituality, but assess and reward almost none of it. A capability theory becomes real only when it affects what we notice, what we cultivate, and what we dignify.
3) Theory of learning: the “how” of human growth
This is the school’s working model of how learning happens, what supports it, what blocks it, and what counts as evidence that it is taking place.
Without a clear learning theory, schools often confuse activity with learning. They swing from one extreme to another: either all instruction and no inquiry, or all projects and little clarity; either control-heavy classrooms or vague permissiveness. A sound learning theory is not ideological. It helps a school choose the right blend of explicit teaching, practice, dialogue, inquiry, feedback, memory work, and reflection.
4) Instructional design: the daily translation of the first three
Instructional design is where the previous categories become visible hour by hour. It is the integration layer.
It is not an independent taste. A school does not simply announce, “We like project-based learning,” or “We believe in direct instruction,” or “We do mastery grading,” as if these were free-floating preferences. Those choices only make sense when they emerge from a coherent philosophy, a coherent capability map, and a coherent theory of learning.
When the first three are vague, instructional design becomes a collage of trends. When they are coherent, daily teaching gains clarity.
This values–elements distinction helps schools in at least three ways. First, it creates coherence over collection: you stop stacking programs and start building a system. Second, it improves the quality of debate: teams can identify whether they are disagreeing about the timetable, or about the nature of learning itself. Third, it makes iteration smarter: design elements can be refined quickly, while core values remain stable unless evidence truly demands reconsideration.
Why some school systems look strong: coherence between school and society
One useful hypothesis for understanding why many Western liberal schooling systems appear successful—especially by dominant global measures—is coherence.
This is not a claim that they are morally better. Nor is it a claim that other traditions lack depth. It is a claim about alignment.
A broad philosophical anthropology in such systems often privileges the rational, language-bearing individual. The capabilities that become dominant public signals of competence are literacy, numeracy, and abstract reasoning. Learning is then made visible through benchmarks, grades, scores, and standardized performance bands. Instructional design becomes engineered to produce those outcomes reliably at scale. And the wider society reinforces the same definition of competence through credentials, professions, and institutional prestige.
In other words, the pipeline is consistent.
Schools emphasize the same capabilities that society rewards. Society rewards the same capabilities that schools can most easily measure. So the system looks effective, particularly on the metrics it values. Whether one agrees with that definition of the human being is another matter. But the coherence is real.
Why many Islamic schools struggle: not lack of Islam, but lack of coherence
Now the contrast can be stated more carefully.
The problem is seldom that Islam lacks an educational philosophy. On the contrary, Islamic intellectual tradition carries a rich educational vision: adab, character, justice, knowledge as trust, service, accountability before Allah, cultivation of the self, and responsibility toward creation.
The recurring problem is incoherence.
Many schools that identify as Islamic speak in one register and operate in another. Their stated philosophy may be holistic formation: faith, character, service, and responsibility. But their working capability model often narrows toward exam performance, memorization as status, and outward compliance. Their language about learning may speak of tarbiyah, transformation, and the heart, while the actual classroom treats learning as correct recitation, rule-following, and performance under pressure. Instructional design then becomes exam preparation plus behavior management.
Students notice this very quickly.
They learn what the school truly values not from the brochure, but from the incentives. What gets praised? What gets punished? What earns status? What counts? If the real system rewards marks, image, and compliance more than truthfulness, sincerity, responsibility, and service, students will adapt to the real system.
In my view, this is where the deepest damage occurs. A child can survive academic pressure. What is harder to repair is the association of faith with humiliation, image-management, or adult control. A school can be high on “religious content” and still fail religiously in the deepest sense, because it trains outward compliance with inward resentment. That is not tarbiyah. It is behavior management wearing religious clothing.
It is also important to be fair here. Much of this incoherence is structural, not merely personal failure. School leaders are often constrained by national exams, parental anxiety tied to economic survival, global status hierarchies that privilege imported metrics, limited teacher preparation, and funding pressures that reward appearance more than integrity. But structural pressure does not remove the need for clarity. In fact, it increases it.
A coherent Islamic school design model
If Islamic education is to become true to itself, it must become coherent. Not merely spiritually inspiring in language, but structurally consistent in what it teaches, rewards, measures, and practices every day.
1) Philosophy: the human being as khalīfah and ʿabd
A coherent Islamic school begins with a different view of the human being.
The learner is not primarily a future worker, a test-taker, or a brand ambassador for the school. The learner is khalīfah: entrusted with responsibility on earth. The learner is also ʿabd of Allah: called to worship, sincerity, accountability, and inner freedom from the domination of ego, status, ideology, and people. The learner carries amānah and is called to istiʿmār—to build, cultivate, and improve life on earth with justice, mercy, and care.
That changes the meaning of success.
Success is not “winning school.” It is not merely securing credentials, nor looking religious under supervision. It is fulfilling the covenant with Allah in belief, worship, character, truthfulness, justice, and beneficial action. Education, then, is not merely preparation for economic survival. It is preparation for accountable freedom.
2) Theory of capabilities: a whole-human capability map
From this follows a broader and more faithful theory of capability.
Academic attainment matters, certainly. Literacy, numeracy, scientific reasoning, and strong communication matter greatly. But they sit inside a larger human map.
A coherent Islamic school should be intentionally forming spiritual agency, moral self-governance, intellectual responsibility, relational and civic ethics, stewardship competence, truthful communication, and belonging with dignity.
Spiritual agency means sincerity, gratitude, remembrance, repentance, and worship with meaning rather than performance. Moral self-governance means resisting ego, managing desire, telling the truth, and taking responsibility. Intellectual responsibility means reasoning carefully, seeking knowledge honestly, and disagreeing with adab. Relational and civic ethics means mercy, justice, service, courage, and repair of harm. Stewardship competence means practical life skills, craftsmanship, sustainability, ethical use of technology, and the ability to make and maintain what benefits others. Truthful communication means speech and writing used as amānah, not ego. Belonging with dignity means being able to live among difference without losing faith or humiliating others.
In such a model, academic strength is not downgraded. It is re-situated. It becomes a tool of service, not the definition of the human being.
3) Theory of learning: grace, effort, relationship, and moral agency
A coherent Islamic learning theory must protect both grace and agency.
Growth comes by tawfīq and effort; both are real. The heart cannot be coerced into sincere belief, so a school must distinguish between necessary boundaries and a coercive religion culture. Learning is embodied: it shows up in habits, practice, service, decisions, and repair, not only in correct answers. It is relational: companionship, trust, and the moral climate adults create shape learning as surely as lesson plans do. And intention matters. The same outward act can be a step toward sincerity or a step toward hypocrisy, depending on what is being cultivated within.
This also changes the question of evidence.
An Islamic school still needs evidence. But it must not confuse evidence with surveillance. Knowledge evidence matters. Practice evidence matters. Character evidence matters. Agency evidence matters: can the learner explain a choice, weigh right and wrong, and do the right thing without needing constant external pressure?
One guardrail matters enormously in my view: do not turn private worship into a public scoreboard. Once prayer, piety, or outward religiosity become instruments of comparison and status, sincerity is placed at risk. Mentoring, conversation, and private self-reflection protect the heart better than public ranking.
4) Instructional design: where beliefs become lived experience
Instructional design is where the previous categories become visible in the day-to-day life of the school.
A coherent Islamic instructional design would therefore do several things at once.
It would teach strong academics, because the Ummah needs competence. It would teach Qur’an and Seerah as living guidance for judgment, leadership, mercy, courage, and justice, not as decorative slogans. It would make room for adab-shaped inquiry, where students may ask real questions respectfully and teachers may answer honestly, including the honorable sentence, “I don’t know.” It would build recurring opportunities for students to choose the good within guidance, so that faith is not reduced to obedient performance. And it would anchor learning in real stewardship work—water, waste, biodiversity, food, energy, ethical technology, social repair—so that istiʿmār becomes lived practice rather than wall decoration.
In such a school, signature learning experiences might include covenant and identity modules, Seerah as leadership studio, justice and civic courage projects, stewardship and sustainability work, mentoring circles, and strong academic mastery blocks framed as amānah rather than status.
Turning values into elements: what a coherent Islamic school looks like in practice
Once the values are clear, the elements become easier to design.
Culture and discipline
A coherent culture combines raḥmah and ʿadl: compassion with boundaries, warmth with accountability. Harm is repaired, dignity is protected, and consequences are used when safety is at stake. The point is not control. The point is to teach learners to become self-governing under Allah.
Such a culture must also actively design against religious status games: who looks most pious, who says the right formulas, who can perform certainty, who wins approval by appearance. Honesty must be safer than image.
Time and rhythm
Prayer should shape the rhythm of the day calmly and meaningfully, not as rushed policing. The week should make room for deep work, halaqah or mentoring, service, reflection, and time in nature or stewardship. Rhythm teaches as much as curriculum. A schedule reveals values more honestly than a mission statement.
Curriculum architecture
A coherent Islamic curriculum is not a religious subject pasted onto a secular frame. It weaves at least three strands together:
Revelation and tradition: Qur’an, meaning, adab, Seerah, Arabic, worship, and ethical understanding.
Creation and society: sciences, mathematics, humanities, civics, economics, history, and technology taught within a God-conscious moral horizon.
Stewardship and making: practical life skills, sustainability, craftsmanship, arts, design, entrepreneurship for benefit, and care for place.
The goal is integration without propaganda, moral purpose without intellectual fragility.
Assessment
A coherent assessment system should combine clear academic standards with portfolios, narrative feedback, student-led conferences, and guided muḥāsabah. This is not softer. It is more truthful. It recognizes that a child is not a single number.
Assess what you claim to value, or stop claiming to value it.
If the school says it cares about responsibility, contribution, justice, collaboration, truthfulness, and agency, then those dimensions should become visible in feedback and documentation. And one ethical line should remain firm: private worship and inner spirituality should be supported through mentoring, not turned into competition.
Teacher role design
Teachers must be designed for as carefully as curriculum.
They are not merely deliverers of content. They are muʿallim and murabbī: skilled instructors and cultivators of character. Staff development should therefore include child development, mentoring, restorative practice, inquiry methods, integrated curriculum design, and adab in disagreement. Teacher evaluation should include not only academic results, but how adults treat children, how fairly they listen, how honestly they answer, and how well they model integrity.
If adults are not formed to live the values, the school becomes a set of posters.
Governance, family partnership, and community
A coherent school cannot be built on hidden decisions, fear-based parent relations, or symbolic consultation. It needs transparency, consultation, and a shared covenant with families. Parents and school must reinforce the same commitment to dignity, justice, truthfulness, and child protection.
It also needs real links with community institutions, wise scholarship, local service, environmental work, and civic contribution. Otherwise istiʿmār remains abstract and faith remains detached from the world.
Anti-indoctrination safeguards
One more point must be stated plainly.
If the school’s aim is to help children become ʿabd of Allah alone, then the school must not quietly raise them to become servants of personalities, factions, or ideologies.
That means no personality cults. It means teaching the adab of disagreement explicitly. It means protecting truth over image, so that students can admit confusion, doubt, or mistakes without humiliation. And it means building repeated moral choice into school life, because children do not become trustworthy by being over-controlled.
A language bridge for contemporary school communities
For schools already speaking in the language of Truth, Beauty, Goodness, compassion, integrity, and spiritual wellbeing, the bridge to a coherent Islamic design is not difficult.
Truth becomes haqq, amanah, clear thinking, honesty in speech, and evidence joined to humility.
Beauty becomes iḥsān in workmanship, environment, relationships, and presence.
Goodness becomes khayr expressed through service, justice, benefit, and moral courage.
Compassion becomes raḥmah in action, not sentiment alone, but mercy that protects dignity and repairs harm.
Integrity becomes inner wholeness: the same child in private and public.
Future orientation becomes istiʿmār: building the earth responsibly and leaving things better than we found them.
The danger is when these words remain branding. The promise begins when they become design criteria.
A simple coherence test for leadership teams
Whenever a school considers a new program, policy, or structure, five plain questions can keep the design honest:
Does this strengthen the learner as khalīfah, or make them more passive and dependent?
Does it help them become ʿabd of Allah, or train them to perform for approval?
Does it build capability across the whole human being, or reward only a narrow academic slice?
Does it increase genuine learning—understanding, practice, character, and agency—or merely compliance?
Does it reduce harm and advance justice in real ways, or is it only symbolic?
These are not complicated questions. But they are searching questions. And many school decisions fail precisely because nobody asks them.
Closing
Schools do not become coherent by slogans, nor by importing one more fashionable program. They become coherent when their deepest values are named clearly and their visible elements are judged by those values again and again.
In the end, design values set the compass. Design elements are the ship. Instructional design is the navigation—where compass and ship meet the ocean of daily learning.
If Islamic education is to become true to itself, it must stop being content with religious language wrapped around borrowed incentives. It must build schools where students can think clearly, worship sincerely, act justly, serve compassionately, repair harm, and cultivate the earth responsibly.
That is a demanding vision. But it is also a credible one.
And in my view, that is what a school begins to look like when it is not merely called Islamic, but actually designed that way.
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