A few years ago, the leadership at my school said that a small group of us would need to apply to become MIEEs. It honestly felt like it came out of the blue, but was actually tied to our showcase school status with Microsoft. The Microsoft Innovative Educator Expert program came about to bring educators across the US (and the world) together to share and learn more about Microsoft education products.
The application - when I first applied - asked for a lot of evidence that I was using Microsoft products in my classroom or with staff. I had a lot of fun making my first Sway application! It was easy to find all sorts of ways I was using Microsoft products throughout my school day.
Here is the link to my application:
I chose 2 Microsoft apps to focus on, OneNote and and Teams.
OneNote is a notebook-like application that can be used for all sorts of reasons. In school I have used it to help me track instructional coaching with teachers I support, connections and notes for myself around teachers, information about students in my classes, and helping me keep organized when planning lessons. OneNote allows you to create sections and then within those sections you can create pages - it's very similar to a 5-subject notebook you might be at the store, although you can have more than 5 subjects!
Teams is Microsoft's instant messaging & video platform, but it also contains digital classrooms. When I first applied to be an MIEE in 2020, Teams was new but something I used everyday. In the past 4 years the features have increased and it's become very classroom friendly. During the stay-at-home COVID era, Zoom and other video platforms were making leaps and bounds of progress in their systems. There are still features in Zoom that I admire and hope that Microsoft will copy, but Teams has taken a slower, more methodical approach to rolling out their features.
Check out my following blog posts to learn more about both of these applications.