I don't have 10 things for your list, but I can describe the syllabus of the Introduction to Geometric Group Theory Masters' course I have taught for the last couple of years. I hope this is worth mentioning, because it takes a different tack to the other two answers.
The idea is very much not to comprehensively cover all the main topics of the subject, nor to focus on "big theorems". Rather, the course motivates the kinds of problems that interested Dehn and his contemporaries, and shows how geometric techniques can be used to solve them.
The course consists of 24 50-minute lectures, and the syllabus is as follows.
I COMBINATORIAL GROUP THEORY
Free groups and presentations. Historical case study: Dehn's construction of infinitely many 3-dimensional homology spheres. (This motivates the question: How can we distinguish them? Dehn's examples are Seifert-fibred spaces with triangular base orbifolds.) Van Kampen diagrams.
II BASICS OF GEOMETRIC GROUP THEORY
Cayley graphs. The Schwarz--Milnor lemma. Case study: free groups. (We return to free groups and study them via free actions on trees.)
III BASS--SERRE THEORY
Amalgamated free products. HNN extensions. Graphs of groups. The Bass--Serre tree. Property FA. (Dehn's examples have FA, so Bass--Serre theory won't help us with them!)
IV FUCHSIAN GROUPS
Hyperbolic geometry. Examples of Fuchsian groups. (We prove Poincaré's polygon theorem, to see that hyperbolic triangle groups are Fuchsian.) Centres and Dehn's examples. (We apply our understanding to Dehn's examples, and conclude that they are all different. The point is that their quotients by their centres are all triangle groups with different orders of torsion.)
V HYPERBOLIC GROUPS
Hyperbolic metric spaces. The Mostow--Morse lemma. (This seems to be the correct name for what is often called the Morse lemma.) Hyperbolic groups. Local geodesics. Dehn's algorithm.