
Back in December, a couple of my colleagues (thanks
Charles) nominated me for the
Google Certified Innovator program. I had heard of the program and thought it might be worth applying, but when two people suggested it, I thought I might as well throw my hat in the ring.
As it turns out, the application process involved a little more than throwing a hat. It was more like ideating a concept for a hat, designing the hat, making a prototype, and testing it out on a few different heads before finally producing a hat, and then trying to sell the hat to, oh you know, just those people who run GOOGLE. No big deal.
And of course, Last Minute Leslie left this until the day before the deadline to start. I had to come up with an idea for an action plan, fast. But thanks to Cohort 21, I already had a few ideas brewing.

As it turns out, the Google Certified Innovators program is taking a page from the Cohort 21 playbook: 35 participants (the cohort) each develop a project (aka action plan) that they'd like to work on over the course of year, supported by face-to-face sessions and online connections with coaches and facilitators and other cohort members. Sound familiar? It's no coincidence that the Google Innovators program and Cohort 21 have a lot in common. Cohort 21 was actually born out of the predecessor to the Certified Innovators Program, the Google Teacher Academy (thanks, Justin Medved @jmedved). Although back then, the program was one weekend, not a year long supported endeavor as it is now (I like to think Google borrowed that idea from Garth and Justin).
Long story short, developing an action plan for my application was pretty easy: it's my Cohort 21 action plan on steroids. Google encouraged us to dream big in our applications, and so big I dreamt:
My HUGE goal is to build a school where students are outside in the community, learning from the city and from experts in many areas, rather than sitting in a classroom listening to me talk. Students would be collaborating on real world problems that have authentic audiences and they would be creating rather than consuming ideas. They would be driving their own learning and designing their own projects while teachers would act as facilitators and guides along the way. Technology would be use to facilitate and manage these experiences.
My BIG goal is to create a resource to help other teachers around the world implement and manage project based learning using technology. It could include inspirational videos, how-to toolkits, links to other great stuff already in the world, tips on using technology to facilitate this type of learning, best practices based on pedagogical research, or even just a community for people to share and collaborate.
My MEDIUM sized goal would be to collaborate with other teachers in my local network in Toronto to share ideas about how design thinking and project based, place based approaches to learning can put students in the driver’s seat and how we can leverage technology to make that happen. I know there are others in my area who are doing similar things to me. Building a local network would open up possibilities, be a launch pad for collaboration, and make all of our work better, together.
My SMALL goal would be to refine my own use of technology to improve the way that I manage student driven projects and share that learning with others. For example, I recently gave two presentations at the Toronto Ed Tech Teams Summit featuring Google Apps for Education on how I manage student driven learning using Forms, Docs (otherwise known as the “docAppender changed my life” presentation) and Hangouts I’d like to explore other tools for managing and tracking student progress and providing timely, effective feedback to students and then share what I learn with others.
The above images are slides from my
10-slide "vision deck" for the application. I also submitted this YouTube video to accompany my presentation, and had to design my "
Dream Classroom", for which I used a Google Map - who needs classrooms when you have the city?!
[youtube]https://youtu.be/BULyo7_lrMw[/youtube]
There is no way that I could have developed this idea, had it not been for all of the deep thinking that I've been putting into my action plan for Cohort 21. And as it turns out, Google liked my big dreams.
Next week, I am off to Google in California (!!) to spend three days with 35 teachers from around the world as we kick off our action plans and work together to shift the education paradigm...just a little.
Already, the group has been collaborating online: we've had a Twitter chat (#MTV16 - for Moutainview Cohort 2016) and Google Hangout On Air. We've been collaborating on a BreakoutEDU game (more on that to come in another post) using Google docs and an app called Voxer, which is new to me. It's been overwhelming as everyone is so smart, has great ideas and has so much energy! It's been interesting and inspiring to see the incredible ideas that other teachers have, and to discover that there are a lot of common themes between our projects (and Cohort 21 action plans): student-driven learning, teacher-driven PD, leveraging technology, and shifting curriculum. Here is the entire playlist of Innovator's videos:
[youtube]https://youtu.be/umXf44Nyjfc?list=PLlrU8CHSgrRZAyRYYwAnIkIY7ysMcYUpZ[/youtube]
I'm so lucky to now belong to TWO amazing Cohorts of teachers working on incredible projects.I'm terrified and excited about what next week will bring and I can't wait to share what I learn with everyone here, in the "original" Cohort.

Stay tuned for an email next week with more detail on a Google Hangout that I am planning to bring the two Cohorts together, live from the Googleplex in Mountainview, CA.
A special thanks to @gnichols for supporting me (as always) in turning my idea for a hat into an actual hat and providing insightful feedback on my ideas as they were developed, at the last minute, of course. Also, thanks to @rutheichholtz, @ddoucet, @mjolicoeur, @ksolowey, @chazzard and @shelleythomas for the challenge via Twitter to finally write this blog post!