The first day of ISTE13 I walked into the key note presentation-Jane McGonigal (@avantgame) with a Canadian I had just met. He sits down and comments about how he's surrounded by Aussies. There, sitting next to him was Cameron (@cpaterso) whose knowledge and experience is something to admire. Cameron has since connected me with TeachMeet Australia (www.teachmeet.net) where I have met many dedicated educators such as Matt (@mesterman) and Jeannette (@7Mrsjames), who I now call friends.
ISTE13 clarified my thoughts that teaching and student learning had ventured onto an exciting path. Some educators had already taken that path, others were looking for directions to it and some didn't know this path even existed. I attended Diane's DT workshops and in one sat with Julie Lindsay (@julielindsay) who is a global and innovative educator (Flat Connections Projects). I can honestly say that ISTE13, those who presented and those I met, inspired me to take that path with more conviction. Diane suggested a book to help explicitly teach the process of Design Thinking. It is designEd http://www.lulu.com/shop/maureen-carroll/designed/ebook/product-20497202.html. She also recommended a Stanford MOOC where I spent my Sunday mornings learning about DT (8 Weeks). This provided the framework and confidence I needed to implement DT into my classroom.
In Term 3, I integrated DT into an established HSIE unit, People and their beliefs, while also explicitly teaching the process. I believe it's important to introduce the concepts such as interviewing skills and working collaboratively through mini-lessons. Throughout this unit, student engagement was evident and skills such as designing, collaborating, creative thinking, questioning and their ability to reflect significantly developed. I believe you need to front load and establish the process before applying DT to a unit. The most important and significant thing I learnt was that my students generated the 'Needs Statement' not from their interview questions but by a simple comment one girl made while playing with my students. Her comment generated a wonderful insightful discussion and I have to thank my friend, Helen (@MrsMorgani) for connecting our students. It was amazing to hear one student explain the meaning of 'Don't judge a book by its cover'. The needs statement they generated was applied to their chosen topic-Hinduism, Judaism, Christianity, Islam, Buddhism or Indigenous Beliefs. Best of all, EMPATHY was the basis of this unit.
Thanks to John (@johnqgoh), I've since attended #PLSM13 run by Bianca @biancaH80 & Lee @waginski who continue to introduce PBL to many classrooms. I have asked others about the difference between Genius Hour, Design Thinking and PBL and from my understanding, in PBL, teachers design the driving question. In DT, students create a 'Needs Statement' by interviewing the stakeholders or researching a teacher-given topic. In Genius Hour, students have the freedom to choose the topic and generate their own questions.

Appreciatively,
Andrea
Feedback is very much appreciated.