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Teaching and Learning with AI Conference
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Thursday, June 11
 

8:00am EDT

Recharge Lounge
Thursday June 11, 2026 8:00am - 5:00pm EDT
Take a breather and make the most of your break! Stop by to charge your devices, grab a coffee or refreshment, and explore what our sponsors have to offer. Whether you want to strike up a conversation with a fellow attendee, make a new connection, or simply catch up on email, this is your space. No agenda, just opportunity.
Sponsors
avatar for Adobe

Adobe

Adobe

avatar for Apporto

Apporto

Apporto

avatar for Boodlebox

Boodlebox

Boodlebox

avatar for Curricu

Curricu

Curricu

avatar for D2L

D2L

D2L

avatar for EBSCO

EBSCO

EBSCO

avatar for Feedback Fruits

Feedback Fruits

Feedback Fruits

avatar for Harmonize Learning

Harmonize Learning

Harmonize Learning

avatar for iDesign

iDesign

iDesign

avatar for Kyron Learning

Kyron Learning

Kyron Learning

avatar for McGraw Hill

McGraw Hill

McGraw Hill

avatar for Turnitin

Turnitin

Turnitin

avatar for Verballi

Verballi

Verballi

Thursday June 11, 2026 8:00am - 5:00pm EDT
Citrus

8:00am EDT

Registration
Thursday June 11, 2026 8:00am - 5:00pm EDT
Welcome! Please stop by the Registration Desk to sign in and collect your name badge upon arrival. Don't forget to grab your swag bag filled with event goodies while you're here! Our team will be happy to answer any questions you have -- and the Registration Desk remains open throughout the entire conference, so feel free to stop by anytime you need assistance.
Thursday June 11, 2026 8:00am - 5:00pm EDT
Coastal Landing

9:00am EDT

First Time Attendee Free Pre-Conference
Thursday June 11, 2026 9:00am - 10:00am EDT
This pre-conference session is aimed at first-time attendees and will provide an orientation to introduce the event’s goals, formats, and key themes—pedagogy, assessment, instructional design, accessibility, academic integrity, and institutional policy—while showing how to navigate the schedule, choose sessions and posters that match your goals, and identify useful networking opportunities.  Attendees will get tips on how to maximize their engagement with the entirety of the event.  Also, presenters will provide a demonstration for any new presenters on how to submit their materials to the UCF Institutional Repository, STARS.  https://stars.library.ucf.edu/teaching-and-learning-with-ai/
Speakers
EM

Eric Main

University of Central Florida
avatar for Lauren Kehoe

Lauren Kehoe

Head of Research Engagement, University of Central Florida
Thursday June 11, 2026 9:00am - 10:00am EDT
Coastal 7

9:00am EDT

What’s happening now with AI, and what will come next? Free Pre-Conference
Thursday June 11, 2026 9:00am - 10:00am EDT
Clearly, LLMs have improved since bursting onto the public scene in 2022. New frontier models are released by the big players seemingly every few weeks. These updates expand capabilities beyond simple conversations, and include file uploads and downloads. There are now sub-models that provide reasoning, thinking, and deep research, all of which tackle thornier problems and are less prone to hallucinations. But the world of AI is bigger than LLMs. Agentic browsers now perform tasks directly on websites, and similarly-powered desktop agents can create, organize, or delete files directly on your computer. Wearable AI devices, including smartglasses with digital displays in the lenses, will only become more varied and prominent going forward. The marriage of AI and robotics promises to revolutionize entire industries, not to mention life inside the home. The future will bring even more advances. We'll close by exploring what ramifications for education might arise from artificial intelligence that matches, or even exceeds, human intelligence.
Speakers
avatar for Kevin Yee

Kevin Yee

Director, Faculty Center, University of Central Florida
Thursday June 11, 2026 9:00am - 10:00am EDT
Coastal 8

9:00am EDT

AI in Libraries: An Unconference (Free)
Thursday June 11, 2026 9:00am - 10:15am EDT
Library employees across institutions are grappling with many of the same challenges as AI reshapes our day-to-day work. This interactive unconference session creates space to identify and discuss those challenges and work collaboratively toward practical pathways forward. After briefly framing the landscape, participants will form small groups to discuss their identified challenge and share short pitches, allowing ideas to cross-pollinate across contexts and institutions. The purpose is to name and examine our universal challenges with AI; the goal is not to solve everything, but to leave with actionable next steps and renewed momentum.
Speakers
avatar for Rachel Vacek

Rachel Vacek

Associate Dean for Digital Strategies, Impact, & Visibility, University of Central Florida
avatar for Mary Rubin

Mary Rubin

University of Central Florida
MF

Michael Flierl

Ohio State University

Thursday June 11, 2026 9:00am - 10:15am EDT
Coastal 9

10:30am EDT

Conference Welcome
Thursday June 11, 2026 10:30am - 11:00am EDT

Speakers
avatar for Wendy Howard

Wendy Howard

Director, Digital Learning Innovation, University of Central Florida
As program director of UCF’s iLab, Dr. Howard’s primary focus is to strategically align, promote, and provide project management support for initiatives that contribute to the lab’s mission to serve as an incubator for the next generation of digital learning by supporting faculty... Read More →
avatar for Kevin Yee

Kevin Yee

Director, Faculty Center, University of Central Florida
Thursday June 11, 2026 10:30am - 11:00am EDT
Coastal Ballroom

11:00am EDT

Opening Keynote: Teaching AI and Teaching with AI: Charting the Evolution of Learning, Curriculum, and Professional Practice
Thursday June 11, 2026 11:00am - 12:00pm EDT
Higher education plays a key societal role in preparing those who attend our institutions for what awaits them after graduation. Part of that work requires that faculty innovate their practice to best serve the learning needs of our students. Drawing from the second edition of Teaching with AI: A Practical Guide to a New Era of Human Learning (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2025), Dr. C. Edward Watson will detail trends in the world of work as well as trends in AI and higher education and share why he believes AI Literacy has become essential learning for college students, and why AI is an increasingly important practice for college faculty. He will also offer visions of the future of the professoriate that hold promise for a new era of engagement for students and faculty.
Speakers
avatar for C. Edward Watson

C. Edward Watson

Vice President for Digital Innovation, AAC&U
C. Edward Watson, Ph.D., is the Vice President for Digital Innovation at the American Association of Colleges and Universities (AAC&U). He is also the founding director of AAC&U’s Institute on AI, Pedagogy, and the Curriculum. Prior to joining AAC&U, Dr. Watson was the Director of the Center for Teaching and Learning at the University of Georgia (UGA). He continues to serve as a Fellow in the Louise McBee Institute of Higher Education at UGA and recently stepped down after more than a decade as the Executive... Read More →
Thursday June 11, 2026 11:00am - 12:00pm EDT
Coastal Ballroom

12:00pm EDT

AAC&U Lunch
Thursday June 11, 2026 12:00pm - 1:00pm EDT

Thursday June 11, 2026 12:00pm - 1:00pm EDT
Coastal 9

12:00pm EDT

Buffet Lunch
Thursday June 11, 2026 12:00pm - 1:00pm EDT
Key: (V) = Vegan; (Veg) = Vegetarian; (GF) = Gluten Friendly (note: the kitchen is not rated for “Gluten Free”)

Soup
  • Carrot Ginger Bisque, Toasted Pepitas (V) (GF)
Salads
  • Blueberry and Almond Salad: Mesclun Mix, Toasted Almonds, Blueberries, Goat Cheese Crumbles, Peach Vinaigrette (V) (GF)
  • Roasted Vegetable Farro Salad: Zucchini, Kalamata Olive, Cucumber, Marinated Tomato, Kale, Lemon Basil Vinaigrette (V)
Entrees
  • Flat Iron Steak: Artichoke Heart, Red Peppers, Beef Jus (GF)
  • Pan Seared Salmon: Cajun Cream Sauce, Asparagus Tips, Roasted Tomato (GF)
  • Coconut Chickpea Curry (V)
  • Pasta Primavera: Mushroom, Roasted Tomato, Squash, Marinara, Shaved Parmesan (Veg)
  • Florida Corn Succotash: Lima Beans, Peppers, Spinach, Fine Herbes (V) (GF)
Desserts
  • Paris Brest Profiterole (Veg)
  • Raspberry & Lemon Madeleine (Veg)
  • Double Chocolate Tart (Veg)
Thursday June 11, 2026 12:00pm - 1:00pm EDT
Exhibit Hall F

12:00pm EDT

Stick It, Share It: AI Teaching & Learning Exchange
Thursday June 11, 2026 12:00pm - 5:00pm EDT
Throughout the conference, interactive boards with bold AI provocation prompts will invite attendees to pause, reflect, and respond by hand. Add your ideas, questions, and experiments with AI to a collaborative board. Browse others’ notes, make connections, and leave with practical inspiration you can use right away. Come for the conference. Stay for the conversation.

Speakers
avatar for Lauren Kehoe

Lauren Kehoe

Head of Research Engagement, University of Central Florida
Thursday June 11, 2026 12:00pm - 5:00pm EDT
Coastal Landing

1:00pm EDT

Beyond Detection: How Oral Assessment Diagnoses Your Teaching, Not Just Their Cheating
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:00pm - 1:30pm EDT
Faculty are spending more time policing AI submissions than designing meaningful assessments. The arms race is unwinnable, and detection tools keep producing false positives that damage real students. Oral assessment offers a different path. When students complete short oral responses on their own time, voice authentication confirms authorship and AI grading runs against the faculty member's rubric, not a vendor's. Aggregate response data even reveals where the teaching itself has a gap. The assessment doesn't just check integrity. It diagnoses the course. This session walks faculty through what changes when assessment becomes a conversation instead of an artifact.
Speakers
avatar for Brandon Nash

Brandon Nash

CEO, Co-Founder, verballi
I'm the co-founder of verballi, where we build voice-verified assessment for higher-ed. Instead of trying to detect AI in student writing, we verify understanding through short spoken conversations. A student talks through their work in their own voice, and faculty get real evidence... Read More →
MB

Megan Butterworth

Chief Marketing Officer, Verballi
Sponsors
avatar for Verballi

Verballi

Verballi

Thursday June 11, 2026 1:00pm - 1:30pm EDT
Desoto 5

1:00pm EDT

How to Bring AI & Entrepreneurship to the Trades & Workforce Development
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:00pm - 1:30pm EDT
Workforce development programs face increasing pressure to prepare learners for a labor market shaped by artificial intelligence, automation, and entrepreneurial thinking. This session explores how AI and entrepreneurship education can be strategically integrated into skilled trades and workforce training programs. Participants will examine practical models for embedding AI literacy, problem-solving, and business mindset development into technical curricula without displacing hands-on skill acquisition. The session highlights scalable approaches that align industry needs, economic mobility, and sustainable workforce pipelines.#WorkforceDevelopment #AIintheTrades #EntrepreneurshipEducation
Speakers
avatar for Melissa Brooks

Melissa Brooks

Business Instructor, Hillsborough College
Dr. Brooks has had the opportunity to live and travel around the world (86 Moves). She has taught in China, in Cuba, and through online partnerships in Jordan & Israel. She has been teaching for 20+ years. She is an active-duty Military Spouse. She has a diverse background in education... Read More →
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:00pm - 1:30pm EDT
Desoto 2

1:00pm EDT

AI Safety: What to Know Before You Hit Enter
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:00pm - 1:30pm EDT
Faculty are eager to use AI tools to save time, but not all information is safe to enter into generative AI. We’ll focus on FERPA and protecting student data. Participants will work through realistic academic scenarios and decide whether the actions keep data secure or create a FERPA violations. The discussion will clarify gray areas and provide clear takeaways for faculty who want to use AI responsibly without putting student information at risk.
Speakers
MA

Mary Ann Hughes Butts

Professor, Business Administration, College of Southern Nevada
avatar for Ayla Koch

Ayla Koch

Math Professor, College of Southern Nevada
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:00pm - 1:30pm EDT
Desoto 3

1:00pm EDT

AI For Humans: Ensuring Technological Advancements Serve Students and Teachers, Not Vice Versa!
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:00pm - 1:30pm EDT
Everyone says they want humans “in the loop" when it comes to AI. But where should humans be in that loop? Circling around an AI nexus in the center, or sitting in the center ourselves? In this presentation, I argue for the latter. I explain how TCSG's and AI-ALOE's collaborative work in AI research is leading with a people-first approach that improves existing practices rather than disrupting them unnecessarily. This presentation discusses AI technologies developed in collaboration between TCSG professors and AI-ALOE's NSF-funded researchers and sets up our students and teachers alike for success, not stress, in the AI-powered future.
Speakers
JD

Jacob Dallas

Technical College System of Georgia
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:00pm - 1:30pm EDT
Desoto 4

1:00pm EDT

If You Can’t Beat ’Em, Join ’Em: Best Practices for Responsibly Integrating AI into the Classroom
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:00pm - 1:30pm EDT
This session explores how to responsibly incorporate AI into teaching by moving beyond viewing it solely as a threat to academic integrity. The session focuses on practical strategies for assignment design, classroom policies, and ethical use. These will support learning outcomes, student engagement, and critical thinking across disciplines. Faculty will examine how AI can support student research, drafting, and analytical exercises while maintaining academic integrity. Participants will engage with cross-disciplinary examples and leave with adaptable AI assignment ideas that complement—not replace—student learning and faculty expertise.
Speakers
avatar for Colleen Skinner

Colleen Skinner

Law Library Director/ Asst. Professor, Jacksonville University College of Law
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:00pm - 1:30pm EDT
Desoto 1

1:00pm EDT

Designing AI for Teaching, Not Just Access: What Students Actually Ask an AI (and Why That Matters for Teaching)
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:00pm - 1:30pm EDT
In this session, we will focus on what faculty can support with AI, what students actually do with AI tools, and what their use can teach us about learning and teaching. Especially, we will share over two years of cross-school experience designing and implementing a course-based AI teaching assistant across multiple disciplines and student populations. Drawing on real usage data from faculty and students, community of practice throughout the years while using the bot, and instructional design reflections, the session examines the kinds of questions students ask AI over time, as well as faculty experiences of using the bot to support students. Rather than positioning AI as a replacement for instruction or as a means of finding accurate solutions, this session reframes AI as an important assistant to the learning process, as faculty and students seek clarity, struggle with concepts, and need additional scaffolding. Participants will understand the reality of benefits and challenges of using internal coursebot AI, instructional choices, and student support strategies, while maintaining a human-centered and responsible approach to teaching with AI. Attendees will leave with practical insights on using AI tools, including strategies for leveraging custom AI and the internally built coursebot, and a strategy for using AI tools intentionally and purposefully.Keywords:#TeachingWithAI #VirtualCourseBot #HumanCenteredAI
Speakers
avatar for Keirah Comstock, Ph.D.

Keirah Comstock, Ph.D.

University of Rochester
avatar for Yvonne Xu

Yvonne Xu

PhD Student, University of Rochester
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:00pm - 1:30pm EDT
Coastal 10

1:00pm EDT

Comparison of the Development of Student Research Questions in AI-Integrated vs. Traditional Assignments
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:00pm - 2:00pm EDT
In a Master's-level online educational research course, I began using an AI-integrated assignment that guides students to use AI feedback in developing a research question to be used throughout the course. This presentation will compare the quality of research questions developed in the AI-integrated assignment to previous semesters without AI-integration. Further, details about the process of developing and implementing the assignment will be provided.
Speakers
avatar for Lauren Neal

Lauren Neal

Associate Professor of Educational Research, Columbus State University
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:00pm - 2:00pm EDT
Escambia Hallway

1:00pm EDT

From text-based lecture notes to audio podcasts: A faculty-instructional technologist collaboration
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:00pm - 2:00pm EDT
Many, if not all, faculty invest significant time and effort in providing students with meaningful pedagogical touchpoints in online courses. This collaborative project introduces faculty-instructional technologist efforts in repurposing existing text-based lecture notes into audio podcasts as an alternative student-content touchpoint. Guided by the faculty member’s pedagogical beliefs, needs, and goals, the project highlights faculty preferences and collaboration timeline, iterative evaluation over time, and navigating affordances of an AI tool; NotebookLM, when converting/integrating audio podcasts into a graduate level online course delivered through the Canvas learning management system.
Speakers
avatar for Omer Arslan

Omer Arslan

Instructional Technologist, Florida State University Herbert Wertheim College of Business
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:00pm - 2:00pm EDT
Escambia Hallway

1:00pm EDT

Teaching Systematic Literature Reviews with AI: Using Elicit as an Instructional Tool for Faculty and Graduate Students
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:00pm - 2:00pm EDT
AI tools are increasingly used by researchers to support literature reviews, yet many faculty and graduate students lack guidance on how to use these tools critically and responsibly. This poster presents a case study on the use of Elicit as an instructional tool for teaching systematic and structured literature review practices. The poster highlights how Elicit can support early-stage searching, screening, and sense-making when paired with human judgment and traditional research methods. The goal is to demonstrate how AI can be taught as a research support tool, in alignment with the existing traditional practices for information discovery. #AILiteracy #Litreview #AItools
Speakers
avatar for Marta Samokishyn

Marta Samokishyn

Collection Development Librarian, Saint Paul University
Marta Samokishyn, (she/her) is a Collection Development and Liaison Librarian at Saint Paul University, and a Ph.D. student in Digital Transformation and Innovation program at the University of Ottawa. Her research interests include AI literacy in academic libraries, educational technologies... Read More →
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:00pm - 2:00pm EDT
Escambia Hallway

1:00pm EDT

Identifying Gaps in Student’s Knowledge of AI in Information Literacy
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:00pm - 2:00pm EDT
Most AI Literacy research focuses on students’ self-perception of generalized AI literacy. Few assess students' AI literacy skills  in the context of information literacy. A survey of 10 multiple choice questions was developed to test student’s knowledge of AI in information literacy skills aligned to the five criteria described in the AAC&U Information Literacy VALUE Rubric. The gaps identified in this study are the first step in assessing how to integrate AI into institutional curricula and creating relevant learning opportunities for students in an AI assisted world. (#Information Literacy, #AI Literacy, #Assessment)
Speakers
TG

Terri Gotschall

AI Librarian, Rollins College
I am an AI Librarian interested in the intersection of AI and information literacy. My research is: Does teaching AI skills improve information literacy skills as assessed on the AAC&U Information Literacy VALUE rubric. The pilot study says "yes, it does, by a full grade letter... Read More →
CM

Caitlyn Misteri

AI Technologist, Rollins College
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:00pm - 2:00pm EDT
Escambia Hallway
  Ethics/ Policy/ and Governance, Print Poster
  • Co-Author(s) Tanja Vierrether, Rollins College

1:00pm EDT

Don't Build Agents, Build Skills: Teaching Foundation-Level AI Competencies for All Instructors
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:00pm - 2:00pm EDT
This interactive session reframes course design around teaching transferable AI skills rather than constructing end-to-end agents. Participants will learn a skills-first framework that decomposes agent-building into teachable competencies (prompt engineering, data curation, evaluation, interpretability, ethics, iteration). We’ll demonstrate modular assignments, scaffolding strategies, and assessment rubrics that map to real-world tasks without requiring students to build complex systems. Attendees will co-design sample activities for their disciplines and leave with templates adaptable to undergraduate and graduate courses. The session emphasizes equity, reproducibility, and instructional scalability so faculty can integrate meaningful AI skill development immediately into their curricula.
Speakers
TR

Tatiana Rudchenko

GA TECH SCHELLER COLLEGE OF BUSINESS
avatar for Lantz Ferrell

Lantz Ferrell

Lecturer, University of West Georgia
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:00pm - 2:00pm EDT
Coastal 7

1:00pm EDT

Study Abroad: Bon Voyage with AI as your Companion
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:00pm - 2:00pm EDT
The Study Abroad experience can be amplified to provide a student with an enhanced enriching experience through the use of available AI tools.  These AI tools help the student with academic activities, pre-planning for the experience, and cultural diversity awareness.  AI tools can enhance the course's academic activities by offering additional explanations on the covered topics, exploration of career opportunities abroad, generation of own images, and applicable skill mapping.  AI tools are useful for pre-planning activities that include using chat bots for exploring visa/documentation checks for assigned country, alternative feasible itineraries, planning "free time", trip budgets, live maps, and route plans for ease of access while in the host country.  A student's awareness of cultural diversity is heightened by the use of AI tools to learn and communicate key phrases in another language (i.e. Duolingo, Google Lens, etc.), exposure to cultural norms, and local safety alerts.  (#studyabroadtools)
Speakers
AM

Abby Milon

Senior Lecturer, University of Central Florida

avatar for Iryna Malendevych

Iryna Malendevych

University of Central Florida

Thursday June 11, 2026 1:00pm - 2:00pm EDT
Escambia Hallway

1:00pm EDT

From Idea to Interactive: Supercharging Lessons with Gemini Canvas & Claude Artifacts
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:00pm - 2:00pm EDT
In this hands-on workshop, participants will step into an AI-powered playground using Gemini’s Canvas and Claude Artifacts. Educators will explore how these tools can quickly transform ideas into interactive quizzes, games, stories, and customizable learning resources for any grade level. After guided demonstrations, participants will build their own materials with pre-created prompts and practice iterative editing directly with the AI. Whether you teach K–12 or higher education, you’ll leave with practical skills, ready-to-use examples and prompts, and fresh inspiration for designing engaging, student-centered learning experiences.
Speakers
avatar for Shannon Eastep

Shannon Eastep

Instructional Technology Coordinator/Teaching Professor, Northern Kentucky University
Shannon Eastep is a teaching professor and the instructional technology coordinator within the College of Education at Northern Kentucky University.

I teach an Instructional Technology course to undergraduate pre-service teachers as well as a new AI in Education course to undergrads and grads. I has been working at NKU for 22 years and have presented at numerous regional and national conferences both online and in person. I h... Read More →
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:00pm - 2:00pm EDT
Coastal 6

1:00pm EDT

Using the EQUITY-AI Decision-Making Framework in Teaching and Learning
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:00pm - 2:00pm EDT
As artificial intelligence becomes embedded in higher education, faculty need practical tools for ethical decision-making that extend beyond compliance. This interactive session introduces the EQUITY-AI Framework, a step-by-step model for evaluating AI use through lenses of transparency, authorship, bias, privacy, and equity. Participants will engage in polls, case applications, and guided activities to apply the framework. Attendees leave with adaptable strategies and tools they can immediately implement across disciplines and instructional modalities.
Speakers
LS

LoriAnn Stretch

Full Professor, University of the Cumberlands

Thursday June 11, 2026 1:00pm - 2:00pm EDT
Coastal 8

1:00pm EDT

Redesigning General Education with AI: From Enduring Questions to Transferable Skills
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:00pm - 2:00pm EDT
As institutions rethink general education for an era defined by uncertainty, faculty face the challenge of redesigning courses that emphasize coherence, relevance, and transferable skills. This presentation demonstrates how AI tools can support each stage of general education reform—from brainstorming enduring questions to designing scaffolded, skills-based assignments and assessments, from rethinking the first day to creating skill-based rubrics. Drawing on a recent campus-wide Gen Ed transformation, the session offers practical strategies for using AI to streamline curriculum design while strengthening critical thinking, information literacy, and integrative learning.#AIinPedagogy #CurriculumDesign #GeneralEducation
Speakers
MS

Martina Saltamacchia

Professor, University of Nebraska at Omaha
avatar for Amy Ellefson

Amy Ellefson

Lecturer, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:00pm - 2:00pm EDT
Escambia Hallway

1:10pm EDT

The Worst Writer in the Newsroom Is a Robot (And That's the Point)
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:10pm - 1:20pm EDT
We built a custom chatbot for an Introduction to News Editing course that's intentionally bad at its job. Students answer a few questions about story type and length, and the bot generates a flawed article, complete with grammar mistakes, structural problems, and questionable sources. Each student gets a unique story — no two experiences are the same. Students edit the mess and submit it back for instant, rubric-based feedback. After two semesters, we learned that AI makes a surprisingly effective practice partner, as long as humans stay in the loop. We'll share how we built it and what students actually thought.
Speakers
avatar for Melissa Chessher

Melissa Chessher

Belo Foundation Endowed Distinguished Chair, Southern Methodist University
avatar for Adam Peruta

Adam Peruta

Associate Professor, Syracuse University
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:10pm - 1:20pm EDT
Coastal Ballroom

1:30pm EDT

Hands-On Learning in an AI World
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:30pm - 1:40pm EDT
This 10-min talk explores best practices for the balanced integration of artificial intelligence in student learning. It highlights strategies that support ethical, transparent, and skill-building uses of AI while preserving authentic, real-world learning experiences. Emphasis is placed on teaching students how to use AI as a supportive tool for inquiry, feedback, and creativity—rather than a replacement for critical thinking. Practical classroom examples demonstrate how AI can complement hands-on activities, collaboration, and real-life problem solving to foster deeper understanding and learner agency. Example activities to encourage real-world, “hands-on” learning in conjunction with AI will also be provided.
Speakers
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:30pm - 1:40pm EDT
Coastal Ballroom

1:40pm EDT

A "Human-in-the-Loop" Framework for AI-Generated Cases
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:40pm - 2:10pm EDT
Case-based learning enhances student engagement but demands extensive faculty time. This presentation introduces a "Human-in-the-Loop" framework using BoodleBox's multi-model AI platform to accelerate case development while maintaining academic rigor. Piloted in undergraduate anatomy, our approach repositions faculty from content creators to expert curators. AI generates initial cases that faculty validate and refine for pedagogical alignment. BoodleBox's collaborative workspace enabled seamless integration of multiple AI models for writing, image generation, coding, and prompt refinement. Attendees will receive transferable workflows, prompting strategies, and quality assurance protocols adaptable across disciplines, demonstrating how AI can scale evidence-based teaching without compromising educational excellence.#boodlebox#collaborative#case-based-learning
Speakers
avatar for Glori Hinck

Glori Hinck

Senior Instructional Designer, University of St. Thomas
Glori Hinck DC, EdD is a senior instructional designer for the Strategic Transformation of Education, Learning, and Research Center (STELAR) at the University of St. Thomas in Minneapolis/St. Paul MN. In this role, she supports faculty in the design and delivery of online, HyFlex... Read More →
LS

Lesley Scibora

Associate Professor, University of St. Thomas
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:40pm - 2:10pm EDT
Coastal 10

1:40pm EDT

From Prompting to Learning: Making Student Reasoning Visible in an AI-Enabled Blended Humanities Course
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:40pm - 2:10pm EDT
In accelerated, blended humanities courses—particularly at STEM-focused institutions—students increasingly replace primary source reading with generative AI summaries, weakening comprehension and discussion. This session presents a practice-based teaching model that integrates GenAI as a structured reading-and-thinking scaffold rather than an integrity problem. Using scaffolded prompt-engineering assignments aligned with weekly primary sources, students engage GenAI in dialogic interpretation, comparison, and critical questioning. Participants will examine the assignment design, rubric, and coaching model, and leave with a transferable framework for ethically using AI to support reading-intensive courses without sacrificing rigor. #AI-integrated-pedagogy #prompt-engineering #academic-integrity-by-design
Speakers
LJ

Lars Jones

Florida Institute of Technology
Lars R. Jones, Ph.D., is a teaching-track faculty member in the School of Arts and Communication at Florida Institute of Technology, where he has taught since 1999. Trained at Harvard University in the History of Art and Architecture, his work bridges intellectual history, pedagogy... Read More →
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:40pm - 2:10pm EDT
Desoto 5

1:40pm EDT

From Virtual Classrooms to Real Impact: Using VR and AI to Enhance Teacher Candidate Practice
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:40pm - 2:10pm EDT
I will share how a VR and AI-integrated environment can transform teacher preparation by creating low-stakes, deliberate practice opportunities. I will present findings from a study in which teacher candidates used AI-driven VR scenarios to practice leading grade-specific discussions, supported by reflections and performance metrics from the sessions. Participants will then engage in a guided discussion on how these strategies can be adapted within their own instructional contexts. #VR-practice #teacher-preparation #AI-in-education #OvationVR
Speakers
avatar for Zachary Adams

Zachary Adams

Assistant Director Center for Teaching and Learning, Assistant Professor of Instruction, Hope College
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:40pm - 2:10pm EDT
Desoto 1
  Ethics/ Policy/ and Governance, 30-Minute Session
  • Co-Author(s) Sue Brondyk (Hope College)

1:40pm EDT

When AI Reads Student Work: Using Machine Interpretation as Pedagogical Feedback
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:40pm - 2:10pm EDT
As generative AI becomes increasingly embedded in creative and academic workflows, students must learn not only how to use AI tools—but how to interpret and interrogate them. This session presents a classroom–library collaboration that reframes AI image analysis as a form of pedagogical feedback, positioning machine interpretation as a new rhetorical “audience” in multimodal composition. At Goldey-Beacom College, students in Critical Writing I create visual arguments responding to the common reading Advocate by Eddie Ahn, using either traditional artistic methods or AI image generators. After composing written interpretations of their work, images are analyzed using JSTOR’s Seeklight, an AI tool that generates descriptive readings of visual content. Students then compare the AI’s interpretation with their original intent, examining where meaning aligns, diverges, or is misread. Rather than treating AI output as evaluative or authoritative, this assignment reframes machine description as reverse evaluation: students analyze what the AI “sees,” uncover implicit rhetorical assumptions, identify ambiguity or bias, and revise their writing to clarify meaning for both human and machine audiences. This create → deconstruct → reflect → revise cycle transforms AI from a shortcut into a site of critical inquiry. The session will demonstrate how AI misreadings can deepen students’ understanding of visual rhetoric, authorship, ethical design, and multimodal clarity—while reinforcing academic integrity by centering reflection, revision, and intentional meaning-making. 
Speakers
avatar for Russell Michalak

Russell Michalak

Director of Library and Archives, Goldey-Beacom College
avatar for Eman Al-Drous, PhD

Eman Al-Drous, PhD

Goldey Beacom College
I am an adjunct faculty member at Goldey-Beacom College and will begin as an Assistant Professor of Rhetoric and Composition at the University of Tampa in Fall 2026. I have served as a Writing Program Administrator, and my teaching and research interests include AI pedagogy, writing... Read More →
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:40pm - 2:10pm EDT
Desoto 3

1:40pm EDT

Multicultural Prompting: Designing AI Communication Strategies for International Students
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:40pm - 2:10pm EDT
This session invites participants to experiment with prompts that improve clarity, inclusivity, and engagement for international students. Through hands-on examples and small-group activities, attendees will test how phrasing, tone, and structure affect AI responses and student understanding. Together, we’ll explore simple strategies that make AI communication more accessible and welcoming for diverse learners across campus. #inclusive-AI #international-students
Speakers
avatar for Margaret (Peg) Aubin

Margaret (Peg) Aubin

AI Integration Specialist, Southern New Hampshire University
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:40pm - 2:10pm EDT
Coastal 9

1:40pm EDT

Building, Rebuilding, and Scaling Student Badges for AI Skills
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:40pm - 2:10pm EDT
Could badging for AI skills be possible at your institution? Learn how we began, evolved, and scaled our AI badging program to help students develop important perspectives and skills while maintaining a sustainable workflow and ultimately including broader faculty participation and buy-in. We'll share our method for combining the power of our learning management system, BoodleBox, and Padlet to deliver a synchronous learning experience that results in the awarding of the badge. Hear the real truth about the ups and downs and lessons learned along the way, and what's next for our program. 
Speakers
avatar for Anna Haney-Withrow

Anna Haney-Withrow

Florida SouthWestern State College
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:40pm - 2:10pm EDT
Desoto 4

1:40pm EDT

Cheese, Chocolate and Artisanal AI: Strategies for Engaging AI-Resistant Faculty Through Culinary Workshops
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:40pm - 2:10pm EDT
This presentation explores effective strategies for engaging faculty resistant to AI integration in the classroom by hosting culinary-themed workshops. Attendees will learn how to design and implement workshops that feature interactive roundtables with artisanal food (cheese, chocolate, and beer) while discussing practical approaches to AI in education. The workshop title, "Artisanal AI," reflects our commitment to preserving the artistry and craft of original thinking in an age of technology. Participants will leave with a framework for crafting their own engaging workshops that foster collaboration and innovation while emphasizing the importance of original thought.
Speakers
avatar for Rachael Zeleny

Rachael Zeleny

University of Baltimore
museums, escape rooms, gamification, first-year writing, wac curriculum, literature
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:40pm - 2:10pm EDT
Desoto 2

1:50pm EDT

Can AI Make My Class More Fun? Using Humor-Enhanced Teaching Content to Capture Student Attention
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:50pm - 2:00pm EDT
I started asking AI a simple question: “Can you make this slide less boring and maybe even slightly funnier?” I’d like to share my journey and what happened when I started doing this more often. I’ll show a few examples of how I used generative AI to add light humor and fun analogies to my slides. Coming from me, the goal definitely isn’t stand-up comedy but just small tweaks here and there that might help students smile once in a while, stay awake, and hopefully stay more engaged in class. #humor-in-teaching #making-learning-fun
Speakers
avatar for Shikhar Acharya

Shikhar Acharya

Assistant Professor of Business Analytics, University of North Texas at Dallas
Thursday June 11, 2026 1:50pm - 2:00pm EDT
Coastal Ballroom

2:20pm EDT

Sage Against the Machine: Media Literacy as a Strategy in the AI Age
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:20pm - 2:50pm EDT
Synthetic content and “AI Slop” continue to saturate the media landscape, leading to confusion about all kinds of information. Last fall on a Fulbright teaching project, I surveyed students from Florida, Slovakia, Northern Ireland, and Poland about generative AI, higher education and the need for media literacy. Respondents clamored for guidelines for appropriate use of AI in coursework, and for spotting misinformation in AI-generated or manipulated content. After sharing results, I will provide a scalable media literacy framework to supplement emerging AI literacy skills. This strategy allows instructors of any discipline to draw upon their expertise, and show how it's useful when evaluating what we encounter online. #medialiteracy #cross-curricular-pedagogy #knowledge-is-good
Speakers
avatar for Shelbey Rosengarten

Shelbey Rosengarten

PROFESSOR, ST. PETERSBURG COLLEGE


Thursday June 11, 2026 2:20pm - 2:50pm EDT
Suwannee 1

2:20pm EDT

Chat didn’t start the fire: The systems that made ChatGPT the scapegoat for an industry already burning
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:20pm - 2:50pm EDT
ChatGPT changed the landscape of Higher Education, but was it avoidable? Historical context in Higher Ed’s adoption of past technologies can inform where we’ve gone wrong in the last 60 years, and where we’ve gone right. AI may not have started the fire, but it certainly put a microscope to the issues of Higher Ed. Ones that if we look closely enough can teach us how to adequately adapt and make the next AI-pocalypse or technological shift easier. Generative AI may have a lot to answer for - but maybe not all that we blame it for.
Speakers
CM

Caitlyn Misteri

AI Technologist, Rollins College
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:20pm - 2:50pm EDT
Lafayette 2

2:20pm EDT

Dissertation Buddy: AI-Enhanced PhD Support Beyond the Chair
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:20pm - 2:50pm EDT
The dissertation journey is often lonely and overwhelming for PhD students. This presentation introduces the "Diss Buddy," a custom-trained AI chatbot providing 24/7 support to supplement dissertation chairs. By synthesizing research methodologies, institutional guidelines, and peer-reviewed literature, this specialized assistant offers accurate real-time guidance on writing, methodology, and goal-setting. Discover how this innovative tool improves student engagement and research rigor while offering a scalable, replicable framework other faculty can adapt. Join us to explore how custom AI chatbots can transform doctoral mentorship and empower students to navigate the PhD process with greater confidence.#AI-enhanced-mentorship #doctoral-student-success #custom-chatbot-pedagogy
Speakers
avatar for Anthony T. Caito

Anthony T. Caito

Professor of Leadership & Organizations, Anderson University (SC)
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:20pm - 2:50pm EDT
Suwannee 4

2:20pm EDT

Principles for GenAI Use in First-Year Composition at UCF: Enacting Program Values through Collective Action to Support Instructors and Students
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:20pm - 2:50pm EDT
In 2025, the First-Year Composition (FYC) program at the University of Central Florida (UCF) chose to engage in intentional conversations about the development of a meaningful resource, Principles for GenAI Use in FYC at UCF, that would best serve instructors and students as they navigated Generative Artificial Intelligence in their composition courses. Throughout this presentation, we invite others to examine their values and connect those values to GenAI policies, procedures, and guidelines to serve as a useful resource in their own local contexts. We outline how a collaborative, values-driven approach can sustain programmatic commitments in the midst of ever-changing conversations around GenAI.
Speakers
avatar for Pamela Baker

Pamela Baker

University of Central Florida
Pamela Baker holds an M.F.A. in Creative Writing (nonfiction) from the University of Central Florida (2009) and a B.S in Nursing from Northern Arizona University (2001). Her fiction and nonfiction have appeared in many journals, including Gulf Coast: A Journal of Literature and F... Read More →
EP

Emily Proulx

University of Central Florida
NG

Nikolas Gardiakos

University of Central Florida
MF

Meeghan Faulconer

University of Central Florida
avatar for Shane Wood

Shane Wood

University of Central Florida
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:20pm - 2:50pm EDT
Lafayette 4
  AI in K-12 Education, 30-Minute Session
  • Co-Author(s) Vee Kennedy, University of Central Florida

2:20pm EDT

AI Exploration Stations: a Model for Training Faculty and Staff on AI Tools
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:20pm - 2:50pm EDT
Are faculty reluctant to try AI or unsure where to begin? Discover how Florida College’s Center for Teaching and Learning designed engaging AI Exploration Stations to help instructors interact with a variety of AI tools in a hands-on, low-pressure environment. Participants will learn how these stations encouraged curiosity, reduced hesitation, and sparked meaningful conversations about using AI to support teaching and student learning. Walk away with practical ideas you can adapt for your own campus. #AIinEducation #FacultyDevelopment #InnovativeTeaching
Speakers
BC

Bonny Cable

Education Professor, Director of the Center for Teaching and Learning, Florida College
JB

Jonathan Barlar

Education Department Chair, Education Professor, Florida College
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:20pm - 2:50pm EDT
Desoto 1

2:20pm EDT

The Devil You Know: Empowering Faculty with Practical AI Pedagogy Know-How
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:20pm - 2:50pm EDT
Effective AI literacy professional development requires sensitivity to diverse faculty perspectives, especially deep-seated skepticism of artificial intelligence. This session explores a strategy for creating an inclusive, practical, and faculty-centered training series in AI pedagogy. Discover a scaffolded approach that respects faculty bandwidth while providing high-reward learning paths that prioritize human-centered design and sound pedagogical principles. Learning targets and sample activities for three targeted sessions will be shared, along with early findings from the implementation.
Speakers
avatar for Mariya Gluzman

Mariya Gluzman

Instructional Designer & Lecturer, CUNY Brooklyn College
Mariya is a seasoned educator, innovator, and mentor. She serves as an Instructional Designer in Academic IT at the Brooklyn College (CUNY) Library, where she supports faculty, staff, and students in LMS use, digital pedagogy, and course design. She also leads professional development initiatives focused on teaching, working, and learning with AI. Drawing on over two decades of experience as a Philosophy instructor... Read More →
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:20pm - 2:50pm EDT
Suwannee 3

2:20pm EDT

The Regional AI Ecosystem: Faculty Fellows, eLearning Execution, and Community Partnerships Powering Workforce-Aligned AI
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:20pm - 2:50pm EDT
A practice-forward session presents our AI strategy through three Ecosystem-based work-plan pillars: Faculty Fellows & Curriculum Work, eLearning Integration and Execution, and Community & Partnerships. We’ll show how an AI Institute establishes governance and risk-tiered use cases, how Faculty Fellows run rapid pilots to redesign assignments and assessments, and how eLearning scales the work through templates, LMS integration, and an AI Fluency microcredential. Regional partners validate competencies and scenarios to ensure workforce alignment. Attendees leave with a replicable playbook to move from ideas to sustainable, ethical adoption. #AIFluency #FacultyDevelopment #InstitutionalStrategy
Speakers
avatar for Christopher Prokes

Christopher Prokes

Director, AI Excellence Institute, Sinclair College
Chris Prokes serves as the Director of the AI Excellence Institute at Sinclair Community College, where he leads strategic initiatives to integrate artificial intelligence into teaching, learning, and institutional operations. With over 20 years of experience across PK–12 and higher... Read More →
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:20pm - 2:50pm EDT
Lafayette 5

2:20pm EDT

Building Shared AI Fluency: How Multi-Departmental, Multi-Language Faculty Collaboration Shapes Curriculum and Practice
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:20pm - 2:50pm EDT
As AI reshapes education, faculty often face uncertainty, fragmented practices, and limited opportunities for shared reflection, regardless of campus size or resources. This session presents a faculty-centered, cross-departmental, cross-program model that supports collaborative course development for an emerging AI in the Humanities minor, alongside a teaching symposium designed to surface practices and challenges across campus. Rather than focusing on tools, we highlight facilitation strategies, structures, and lessons learned that help move faculty from isolated experimentation to sustained, shared approaches to teaching with AI. #FacultyDevelopment #AIPedagogy #CrossDisciplinary 
Speakers
ES

Emily Sposeto

University of Denver

LR

Lina Reznicek-Parrado

University of Denver
avatar for Ebrahim Bamanger

Ebrahim Bamanger

Teaching Assistant Professor, University of Denver - The Center for World Languages and Cultures - Denver, CO
Ebrahim Bamanger, PhD (he/him) is a Teaching Assistant Professor in the Center for World Languages and Cultures at the University of Denver, and an Adjunct Professor with the Office of Internationalization. He also teaches in the Middlebury College Summer Program. Dr. Bamanger’s... Read More →
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:20pm - 2:50pm EDT
Coastal 10

2:20pm EDT

Guidelines for Using AI to Teach Case History Interviewing: Lessons from an Applied Research Study
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:20pm - 2:50pm EDT
This session presents a set of evidence‑informed guidelines for integrating AI‑supported case history interviewing practice into communication‑focused clinical education. Drawing on insights from an applied research project that compared AI‑facilitated simulation with traditional instructional methods, we summarize the primary conclusions supported by the data about designing effective prompts, structuring practice sessions, and supporting student performance. This presentation highlights practical, scalable strategies educators can adopt to enhance student confidence and competency in foundational interviewing skills. #clinicalskills #aienhancedclinicaleducation #competencybasedsimulation
Speakers
avatar for Becky Jones

Becky Jones

Director of Clinical Education; Associate Professor, Oklahoma Baptist University
Dr. Becky Jones, EdD, CCC-SLP, is Associate Professor and Director of Clinical Education in the Speech-Language Pathology graduate program at Oklahoma Baptist University. With almost two decades of clinical experience in speech-language pathology, her work focuses on competency-based... Read More →
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:20pm - 2:50pm EDT
Lafayette 1

2:20pm EDT

AI and Belonging: Playful Activities for First-Year Learning
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:20pm - 2:50pm EDT
First-year courses are often general education requirements, so students don’t always walk in excited, especially when the subject feels far from their major. In this session, I’ll show how playful, low-stakes AI activities can spark curiosity and help students build a real connection to a field they might not have chosen on their own. I’ll demo three activities (in class or online) that let students experiment with how a discipline thinks and talks, use humor to uncover what it values, and link course ideas to real-world roles and decisions. Participants will leave with copy/paste prompts and reflective activities they can use immediately.
Speakers
BL

Bridget Lillethorup

University of Nebraska Omaha
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:20pm - 2:50pm EDT
Lafayette 3

2:20pm EDT

Path 2: An AI-Centric Course Development Framework Using Custom Bots and Workflow Automation
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:20pm - 2:50pm EDT
Traditional course development processes are too slow. AI-generated courses lack pedagogical rigor. This dichotomy ignores a third option: AI-centric frameworks that maintain quality while dramatically reducing development time. Indiana Wesleyan University's "Path 2" framework leverages custom AI bots, workflow automation, and 'human in the loop' methodology to transform course development. This session demonstrates how structured AI conversations guide developers from learning objectives, through course outlining and alignment, all the way to full course design. Participants experience the process firsthand, drastically reducing course development time while maintaining sound instructional design practices like backwards design principles. Attendees receive a bot template, workflow configurations, and a prompt template for immediate institutional application.
Speakers
avatar for Jessica Clark

Jessica Clark

Learning Experience Designer, Indiana Wesleyan University
Jessica specializes in AI and Digital Media in course design, creating learning experiences that leverage technology and AI to improve student outcomes and engagement. She is also an academic researcher, with her current research focused on Generative AI Course Assistants and their... Read More →
avatar for Jonathon Isham

Jonathon Isham

Learning Experience Designer, Indiana Wesleyan University
Dr. Jonathon K. Isham is an accomplished instructional design leader and learning experience strategist with more than 20 years of experience shaping online education, higher education leadership, and workforce training. His career has been defined by innovation at the intersection... Read More →
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:20pm - 2:50pm EDT
Desoto 2

2:20pm EDT

AI in Military Education: How students and faculty view and use AI
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:20pm - 2:50pm EDT
Most studies investigating use and attitudes of generative AI in education focus on undergraduate, civilian, student and faculty populations. How do those users compare to their professional military counterparts, who must operate in institutions with varying degrees of acceptance and skepticism while facing the increased demand in their careers? This session will present the results of a 2025 survey of faculty, staff, leadership, and students at the U.S. Naval War College on their habits and attitudes regarding the use of AI in education. Because survey questions were adapted from existing surveys at civilian institutions, we will also directly compare these results to those at civilian undergraduate institutions, creating opportunities to discuss the wider impact of these tools.
Speakers
avatar for Amanda Rosen

Amanda Rosen

Associate Director, Teaching Excellence Center, US Naval War College
I'm a political scientist by training and my research centers on experiential learning; teaching research methods; simulations, games, and wargaming; and teaching political violence and conflict. My people are: cat people, gamers, foodies, bakers, chocoholics, 80s movie fans, logic... Read More →
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:20pm - 2:50pm EDT
Coastal 9

2:20pm EDT

The ‘Master Student Advisor’: Mass Personalization in Higher Education through Generative AI
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:20pm - 2:50pm EDT
Preparing for a new course is a challenging endeavor that all students must undertake multiple times during their academic careers. How can AI help students prepare better before the course starts? The ‘Master Student Advisor’ leverages the students’ key information and AI to present a personalized plan for each specific course, that includes: strengths and gaps analysis, study strategies, networking opportunities, suggested additional resources, practical applications for the student’s career, etc., tailored to the student’s and professor´s profile, and the course’s needs. This session includes results from pilots applied in a Triple-Crown business school.
Speakers
avatar for Sandro Sanchez

Sandro Sanchez

Director of MBA Programs, PONTIFICIA UNIVERSIDAD CATOLICA DEL PERU
My profile: https://centrum.pucp.edu.pe/centrum/profesores/sandro-sanchez/Research Center: https://centrumthink.pucp.edu.pe/centros-de-investigacion/centro-de-investigacion-en-ia-y-el-futuro-de-los-negocios/
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:20pm - 2:50pm EDT
Suwannee 2

2:20pm EDT

The Be S.M.A.R.T. with AI Framework: Helping Students Make Better Choices
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:20pm - 2:50pm EDT
“Can I use AI for this?” is a question many of us hear daily, yet clear answers are still hard to find. In this session, a department director shares how her English faculty moved past AI bans and vague policies by developing the Be S.M.A.R.T. with AI framework. You’ll see how this model is reflected in assignment language, shared expectations, and "The Student Guide to AI" course learning module that helps students think through ethical use, effective prompting, creative thinking, and responsible decision-making. Leave with ideas you can adapt to bring transparency and consistency to AI use in your own teaching.
Speakers
avatar for Nikki Buyna

Nikki Buyna

Director- English Dept., Full Sail University
Nikki Morrell Buyna has spent more than 25 years teaching and leading in both K-12 and higher education. As an educator, she taught courses in literature, composition, and humanities while directing various performing arts programs. Her previous roles include Professional Development... Read More →
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:20pm - 2:50pm EDT
Desoto 5

2:20pm EDT

AI Playground
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:20pm - 3:20pm EDT
Stop by and join us for demos on various AI tools! These demos do not include advanced techniques but serve as a tool comparison and provide insights into functionalities using quick examples. Bring your questions, and we'll do our best to provide answers and demonstrations. The stations and presenters are below:

ChatGPT - Dueling AIs: Leveraging Claude and ChatGPT
Melisa Balos, Tulane University

NotebookLM
Emanuel Cortes Lugo, University of Central Florida

Claude
Anastasia Bojanowski, University of Central Florida

Gemini - Gemini, Notebook LM and Workplace Studio
Charley Butcher and Sandra Perez, University of Lynchburg
Speakers
avatar for Charley Butcher

Charley Butcher

Chief Educational Technology and AI Officer, University of Lynchburg
With over 28 years of experience in educational technology and a forward-thinking vision for AI, I serve as a strategic leader dedicated to helping institutions navigate their digital transformation. My expertise is built on a proven track record of leading and implementing large-scale... Read More →
avatar for Sandra Perez

Sandra Perez

Senior Director Academic Initiatives and Human Resources, University of Lynchburg
Sandra E. Perez is a dynamic and forward-thinking leader in higher education, specializing in driving institutional transformation through strategic change management, innovative AI integration, and robust process architecture. With a proven track record of enhancing operational efficiency... Read More →
avatar for Melisa Balos

Melisa Balos

Scholarly Engagement Librarian, Tulane University
I'm a Social Sciences Librarian and former instructor in international relations with over a decade in teaching experience. My work centers on helping students navigate complex information ecosystems, especially now that generative AI is reshaping how knowledge is created, shared... Read More →
avatar for Emanuel Cortes Lugo

Emanuel Cortes Lugo

University of Central Florida

Thursday June 11, 2026 2:20pm - 3:20pm EDT
Escambia

2:20pm EDT

The AI-Infused Assessment Playbook: A 360° Workshop on Designing Compliant, Student-Approved Assignments
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:20pm - 3:20pm EDT
Faculty face the challenge of integrating AI while maintaining rigor and compliance. This interactive workshop moves beyond "cool tools" to offer a complete framework for assignment design. Guided by a faculty member, a current student, and a distance learning director, participants will use "The AI-Infused Pedagogy Playbook" to retrofit their own course assignments. We devote 25 minutes to hands-on adaptation, ensuring participants leave with a pedagogically sound, student-tested, and accreditation-compliant assignment ready for their next syllabus.
Speakers
avatar for Sarah Lewis

Sarah Lewis

Barry University
NS

Nelson Santos

Barry University
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:20pm - 3:20pm EDT
Coastal 7

2:20pm EDT

Creating Equitable Education Through AI Tutors and Faculty Tools That Support Learning and Reflection
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:20pm - 3:20pm EDT
This poster demonstrates how generative AI can support both learners and educators through accessible, practice-driven design. Using Playlab and Chat GPT as platforms, several apps were created to provide students with interactive feedback and scaffolded learning in large courses. Faculty tools were also created to enance reflection, productivity and innovation in professional development. Together, these tools reveal a practical, adaptable pathway for integrating AI ethically and creatively into teaching, learning, and faculty growth, and its applicability to diverse disciplines and institutional settings.
Speakers
avatar for Marivi Tejada-Simon

Marivi Tejada-Simon

University of Houston
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:20pm - 3:20pm EDT
Escambia

2:20pm EDT

Vision and Voice AI Math Tutor
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:20pm - 3:20pm EDT
This project evaluated a proprietary vision and voice AI math tutor, built on Google's Gemini model and Polya's heuristic framework, for effectiveness, efficiency, and satisfaction. The iPad app provides real-time tutoring as students write and speak. The study involved an expert analysis and interviews with 13 high school algebra students. Findings showed the AI was effective at guiding self-correction and highly efficient. However, students reported mixed satisfaction, praising its "cool" factor but finding the Socratic style too slow when simple procedural hints were preferred.#visionAI #voiceAI #mathTutoring
Speakers
CC

Christopher Cardenas

Utah Valley University

Thursday June 11, 2026 2:20pm - 3:20pm EDT
Escambia

2:20pm EDT

Building Your AI Agent Assistant: A Hands-On Workshop Using BoodleBox and Jotform
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:20pm - 3:20pm EDT
Learn to build an AI agent assistant that answers common emails, schedules appointments, and automates routine administrative tasks—no coding required. This hands-on workshop guides participants through creating a personalized AI agent using BoodleBox and Jotform. See a live demonstration of a Provost Office Agent that handles faculty questions, provides policy information, and completes forms in a conversational manner. Participants will build their own agent framework and receive a step-by-step replication guide. Perfect for faculty, administrators, and staff seeking to reduce email volume and reclaim time for high-value work. Bring a laptop and basic tech literacy.
Speakers
avatar for Abby Bell

Abby Bell

Director of Academic Operations, Lipscomb University
Abby Bell is Director of Academic Operations at Lipscomb University, where she has spent three years transforming academic operations through AI implementation and instructional innovation. With over a decade in education, including seven years as an international teacher and vice... Read More →
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:20pm - 3:20pm EDT
Coastal 8

2:20pm EDT

From Draft to Defense: Supporting Graduate Degree Completion with AI-Assisted Writing Tools
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:20pm - 3:20pm EDT
Graduate students often struggle to sustain momentum during thesis and dissertation writing. This session shares findings from an IRB-approved study of master’s and doctoral students using Grammarly for Education, examining how and why they used AI tools and how their perceptions evolved over time. In addition to study results, the session highlights a three-day graduate writing workshop that intentionally integrated AI into thesis and dissertation support, offering a practical model for using AI-assisted tools to promote progress, confidence, and degree completion. #GraduateWritingSupport #AIWritingTools #DegreeCompletion
Speakers
avatar for Jennifer Tilbury

Jennifer Tilbury

Associate Vice Provost for Student Success, University of Alaska Fairbanks
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:20pm - 3:20pm EDT
Escambia

2:20pm EDT

Leveraging AI tools to implement an undergraduate informatics program at an HBCU
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:20pm - 3:20pm EDT
This project strengthened existing STEM programs at Lincoln University by providing training in cutting-edge technologies, development of new courses and labs, novel research internship opportunities, and a minor program in bioinformatics. The AI tools leveraged and topics examined expanded over the years, from genomics, adding Python programing and robotics, then to metabolomics database screening. 39 students have declared a minor in bioinformatics, all of whom have now had research experiences in the field and taken these new classes. The program maintains growth as it has become institutionalized and research collaborations with other universities continue every summer.
Speakers
CG

Carla Gallagher

Lincoln University
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:20pm - 3:20pm EDT
Escambia

2:20pm EDT

From Lesson to Workplace: AI-Cheat-Proof, Career-Ready Assessment Design
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:20pm - 3:20pm EDT
Cartedo 1-min-preview​​​

In this fast-paced, hands-on session, we will design course-aligned workplace simulations that require students to show reasoning, decisions, and use of AI - rendering their copy-paste and answer-only submissions ineffective.

Using a single structured prompt, educators will learn to create authentic, real-world assignments that students complete through an embedded, ChatGPT-like tool within the simulation. Assessments evaluate both how students use AI and what they produce, enabling rigorous measurement of domain expertise, critical thinking, and human–AI collaboration.

Walk away knowing how to turn your course into a real workplace simulation, sending students out AI-ready with the domain knowledge to thrive.

No coding required. No AI background needed. Bring your laptop to fully participate in the session.

#AIPedagogy #AssessmentInnovation #AILiteracy
Speakers
avatar for Lisa Troy

Lisa Troy

Texas A&M University
avatar for Shweta Homji

Shweta Homji

Founder and CEO, Cartedo
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:20pm - 3:20pm EDT
Coastal 6

2:30pm EDT

Keeping Up Without Burning Out: Using AI to Move from Evidence to Assessment
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:30pm - 2:40pm EDT
Conference ProposalTeaching and Learning with AI Conference 2026Proposed Session TitleKeeping Up Without Burning Out: Using AI to Move from Evidence to AssessmentPreferred FormatPrimary: 10-Minute TAI Talk  |  Secondary: Poster SessionSession TrackAI Fluency and Faculty DevelopmentAbstractIn evidence-based fields, the research never stops moving. New guidelines drop, recommendations change, and suddenly last semester's lecture needs an overhaul. Most faculty don't have time to keep up, let alone redesign their courses every time the evidence shifts.This session presents a practical, five-step workflow for using AI to move from new evidence to polished assessments without burning out in the process. The workflow includes: synthesizing new research and guidelines, designing effective presentations, creating engaging learning activities, developing student study guides, and transforming assessment questions from memorization-based to application-focused.Drawing from two years of studying AI in education and one semester of intensive implementation in a graduate nursing program, this session offers concrete strategies any faculty member can adapt, regardless of discipline. Participants will leave with a repeatable framework for keeping courses current while protecting their time and sanity.Learning Objectives / TakeawaysParticipants will be able to:1. Apply AI tools to efficiently synthesize new research, guidelines, or other source material for course content2. Use AI to design visually effective presentations without graphic design expertise3. Generate engaging learning activities such as case studies, discussion prompts, and interactive exercises4. Create student study guides that align with course objectives5. Transform existing assessment questions from recall-based to application-based using AI assistanceCross-Disciplinary AppealWhile examples will be drawn from health sciences education, the five-step workflow applies to any discipline where content evolves, including sciences, policy, law, business, and technology fields. The framework focuses on process rather than discipline-specific tools, making it immediately adaptable for diverse faculty audiences.Presenter BioJ'Laine Proctor, DNP, FNP, PMHNP-BCJ'Laine Proctor is a Clinical Professor at the University of Wyoming's Fay W. Whitney School of Nursing, where she co-developed the Psychiatric Mental Health Nurse Practitioner (PMHNP) curriculum, course work, taught across both didactic and clinical courses in the program. She also maintains clinical practice as a dual-certified Family Nurse Practitioner and PMHNP at Albany Community Health Clinic, where she advocates for integrated behavioral health and primary care. A self-described practitioner of "cowgirl medicine," J'Laine has spent the past two years studying AI applications in higher education; attending every talk she can find, reading widely, and experimenting in her own courses. She's particularly interested in how AI can help faculty keep pace with rapidly changing evidence while still having time for what matters: teaching students to think like providers.Contact InformationJ'Laine Proctor DNP, FNP, PMHNPClinical ProfessorFay W. Whitney School of Nursing (Dept. 3065)Psychiatric Mental Health Nurse PractitionerUniversity of Wyoming436 Health Sciences Center Laramie, WY 82071-2000 Main Office 307-766-4312 Direct 307-766-6571Fax 307-766-4294 [email protected] ● https://www.uwyo.edu/nursing
Speakers
avatar for J'Laine Proctor

J'Laine Proctor

Clinical Professor, University of Wyoming
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:30pm - 2:40pm EDT
Coastal Ballroom

2:50pm EDT

A Practical Framework for Embedding AI into Reflection-Heavy Courses and Assignments
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:50pm - 3:00pm EDT
Reflection-heavy courses ask students to examine how they think, decide, and act, yet these processes are hard to make visible. This TAI Talk presents a framework for embedding session-specific AI assistants to support metacognition, rather than producing student work. Using a first-year course as an example, I demonstrate three tools: an Evolution of Point of View reflection with layered 'Why' questions, an in-class design thinking support tool that transitions ideas from abstract to feasible, and a rubric-aligned feedback tool for pre-submission checks. Transferable across disciplines, the framework supports student agency and academic integrity.#metacognition #assessment #aipedagogy
Speakers
avatar for Anzar Khaliq

Anzar Khaliq

Chief Learning Officer, San Francisco Bay University
I am the founding Chief Learning Officer at San Francisco Bay University, where I lead the Center for Empowerment and Pedagogical Innovation (CEPI). Trained as an experimental physicist at Sorbonne University, my work focuses on reimagining teaching and learning for an AI-driven world... Read More →
Thursday June 11, 2026 2:50pm - 3:00pm EDT
Coastal Ballroom

3:00pm EDT

Designing the Handoff: Why the Future of Student Persistence Requires AI that Knows When to Stop
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:00pm - 3:30pm EDT
In this interactive session, we will explore the critical role of artificial intelligence in supporting student persistence and success. While AI offers powerful tools to guide and motivate learners, its true potential lies not just in intervention, but in knowing precisely when to step back and empower students to take ownership. Discover how designing AI systems with thoughtful handoff points can enhance student autonomy, reduce resistance, and build long-term resilience. Join us to learn why the future of education depends on AI that balances support with independence, ensuring every student’s journey is both empowered and sustainable.
Speakers Sponsors
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:00pm - 3:30pm EDT
Suwannee 3

3:00pm EDT

AI Assisted Course Design: A Practical Faculty Workflow Guided By Backwards Design
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:00pm - 3:30pm EDT
How can faculty move beyond simple prompts to a reproducible, AI-assisted course design process? This session demonstrates a comprehensive workflow using meta-prompting, Deep Research, Google NotebookLM, & AI Agents to augment faculty expertise.  Guided by backwards design principles, attendees will learn to create reproducible, "building blocks" using GenAI to refine course objectives, develop authentic assessments, and tailor learning materials/activities. Whether faculty are refreshing an assignment, building syllabi, or redesigning a course, this workflow offers an AI-assisted path prioritizing the faculty member’s voice and pedagogy.  Participants will leave with a framework for scaling their course design efforts without sacrificing instructional integrity.
Speakers
avatar for John Schumacher

John Schumacher

University of Maryland, Baltimore County (UMBC)
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:00pm - 3:30pm EDT
Suwannee 2

3:00pm EDT

Be a TRAIIL-Blazer! Learn About Our AI Repository
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:00pm - 3:30pm EDT
Join us to learn more about the Teaching Repository for AI-Infused Learning (TRAIIL), the AI collection for higher ed professionals built by you. Discover how TRAIIL aims to enhance educational experiences by serving as a resource of collective strategies, case studies, assignments, etc. This session will include an overview of the TRAIIL submission process, current entries in the repository, and address any inquiries. Don't miss this opportunity to be a TRAIILblazer and share your strategies and expertise with the community!
Speakers
avatar for Nicole Stahl

Nicole Stahl

Project Coordinator II, UCF Pegasus Innovation Lab
avatar for Sarah Norris

Sarah Norris

Digital Initiatiaves Coordinator, UCF Libraries
Sarah Norris is Digital Initiatives Coordinator at the University of Central Florida Libraries. In this role, she leads the Libraries’ Digital Initiatives unit in digitization and the management of STARS, UCF's Institutional Repository. She has presented at local, state, national... Read More →
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:00pm - 3:30pm EDT
Coastal 10
  AI in Pedagogy and Curriculum Design, 30-Minute Session

3:00pm EDT

Beyond AI Users: Teaching human-in-the-loop as a workforce competency
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:00pm - 3:30pm EDT
We've taught students to use AI. The next frontier is teaching them to supervise it. As AI handles more knowledge work, employers and accreditors will demand graduates who can serve as effective human-in-the-loop (HITL) overseers. This means verifying AI outputs, catching failures, and knowing when to trust or override recommendations. This session introduces HITL oversight as an emerging workforce competency, identifies four teachable skills (recognizing hallucination, resisting automation bias, detecting sycophancy, spotting reward hacking), and provides adaptable classroom activities for any discipline.Keywords: #workforcereadiness, #AIoversight, #AIliteracy
Speakers
ET

Erin Taylor

Professor, Washington and Lee University
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:00pm - 3:30pm EDT
Suwannee 4

3:00pm EDT

From Policy to Practice: Embedding AI Tools and Agents into Authentic, Assessable Coursework
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:00pm - 3:30pm EDT
Artificial intelligence is rapidly reshaping higher education, yet many faculty struggle to move beyond policy statements into meaningful classroom implementation. This session presents a practical framework for embedding AI tools and agents directly into course assignments, using a Health Data Analytics course (HLTH 212) as a case study. Participants will explore how AI can support data analysis, critical thinking, and skill development while maintaining academic integrity. The session emphasizes assignment design, transparency, and transferable strategies that can be adapted across disciplines.#AIinTeaching #AssignmentDesign #PracticalAI
Speakers
RK

Rhonna Krouse-Adams

College of Western Idaho
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:00pm - 3:30pm EDT
Lafayette 1

3:00pm EDT

AI in Business Education: Bridging the AI gap for the future workforce
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:00pm - 3:30pm EDT
As artificial intelligence (AI) rapidly transforms the business landscape, higher education institutions face mounting pressure to ensure graduates are AI-literate and workforce-ready. At Northland Pioneer College, we have embarked on a data-driven journey to embed AI into all five of our business programs, spanning both associate and bachelor’s degrees. This presentation will highlight the data supporting AI integration, and provide practical examples of how we infuse AI skills into the curriculum—even with limited resources.
Speakers
avatar for Rachel Townsend

Rachel Townsend

BUS/ECN Department Chair, Northland Pioneer College
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:00pm - 3:30pm EDT
Lafayette 3

3:00pm EDT

(CANCELLED) The Right Tools for the Job: My EdTech Setup for the GenAI Era
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:00pm - 3:30pm EDT
Forget the edtech hype cycle. This session reveals the actual toolkit behind AI-resilient courses: Canvas features you're not using, third-party tools that solve real problems, and custom GPTs that guide rather than replace thinking. You'll see how strategic tool selection, not tool proliferation, creates courses where AI becomes irrelevant to cheating but useful for learning. From social annotation platforms that eliminate traditional quizzes to video tools that ensure technical competency, these aren't hypothetical recommendations. They're the tested stack that transformed my teaching, improved student outcomes, and made courses I actually enjoy facilitating.
Speakers
avatar for Maikel Right

Maikel Right

Associate Director of Instructional Learning Tech, Florida International University
I believe technology should be an extension of our best selves, not just a tool for efficiency. I help people and teams navigate the journey of self-discovery and growth, using the power of personal story and intentional AI to advocate for the communities they love. My goal is to... Read More →
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:00pm - 3:30pm EDT
Lafayette 5

3:00pm EDT

Useful, Not Magical: Teaching Students to Find Sources and Verify Claims with AI
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:00pm - 3:30pm EDT
When students need sources, many go straight to AI, and it's easy to see why. It summarizes, it cites, and it always sounds like it knows what it's talking about. The problem is not that students are using AI for research. The problem is that they often don't know how to push back on it. Instead of asking whether students should use AI for research, this session asks how we teach them to do it thoughtfully. Through Mike Caulfield's SIFT method applied directly to AI-generated content, we'll explore practical critical AI literacy strategies that help students use these tools to find and evaluate sources while recognizing misinformation and avoiding over-reliance on text that may sound authoritative but can't always be trusted. Grounded in English composition but adaptable across disciplines, this session offers a framework, a few open questions, and materials you can take back to your own classroom or library. #InformationLiteracy #CriticalAIUse #Writing
Speakers
avatar for Dr. Laura Adele Soracco

Dr. Laura Adele Soracco

Highline College

Thursday June 11, 2026 3:00pm - 3:30pm EDT
Desoto 4

3:00pm EDT

Intersections of AI and Culture in the Classroom
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:00pm - 3:30pm EDT
Understanding the intersection between AI and culture is important. Culture shapes the development and usage of AI, and it should be central in discussions about AI ethics, but is rarely targeted by guardrails. The lens of AI as a cultural artifact addresses large-scale questions about data sovereignty, language preservation, and worldviews represented in training data, as well as more practical questions about how to build AI fluency and how to frame AI for multicultural student populations. Attendees will learn to critically analyze AI through a cultural lens, and they will leave with practical activities for engaging students in culturally-centered AI.
Speakers
avatar for Elizabeth Giltner

Elizabeth Giltner

Instructional Specialist, The University of Central Florida
Hello!  I am an instructional specialist with more than 2 decades of experience in higher education.  In the realm of AI, my work focuses on the social, cultural, and ethical dimensions of artificial intelligence in higher education. I am interested in helping novice and experienced... Read More →
avatar for Lili Yan

Lili Yan

Postdoc Research Associaate, Michigan State University
Learning scientist, design-based, community-based research, and research-practice partnership
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:00pm - 3:30pm EDT
Lafayette 2
  Institutional Strategy and Leadership, 30-Minute Session |   AI in Pedagogy and Curriculum Design, 30-Minute Session
  • Co-Author(s) Maha Bali (The American University in Cairo), Brenna Clarke Gray (Thompson Rivers University), Caitlin K. Kirby (Michigan State University), Laura Yost (The University of Iowa)

3:00pm EDT

“Accountability and AI Use in Student Work: Practical Guidelines for Disclosure, Verification, and Citation”
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:00pm - 3:30pm EDT
This session provides guidelines and structures that can help students ethically take advantage of AI by disclosing the kind and extent of use in their research and writing. We will look at practical disclosure examples, ways to double‑check AI‑generated citations or facts, and how to cite AI tools in Chicago, APA, and MLA styles. The goal is to give faculty and librarians straightforward, adaptable guidance they and their students can apply immediately. #citing-AI #disclosing-AI-use
Speakers
avatar for Tom Walker

Tom Walker

Professor, School of Information Sciences, Wayne State University
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:00pm - 3:30pm EDT
Desoto 1

3:00pm EDT

Teaching and Learning Across Disciplines: using customized AI to foster Curiosity, Connections, and Creating Value
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:00pm - 3:30pm EDT
This presentation explores how AI-enabled tools can support the alignment of national STEM education frameworks with classroom practice. Building on KEEN-inspired principles that aim to equip students with the skills to identify opportunities, innovate, and contribute meaningfully to society, we demonstrate how AI can help instructors design, adapt, and curate high-impact learning tasks. While our examples focus primarily on mathematics and engineering, the ideas of an opportunity- and impact-oriented approach to teaching can be applied across the curriculum. Participants will be able to engage in hands-on activity design and discuss how AI can accelerate evidence-based, application-driven teaching.
Speakers
avatar for Wojciech Kossek

Wojciech Kossek

University of Denver
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:00pm - 3:30pm EDT
Desoto 2

3:00pm EDT

What Are Your Students Missing? Accessibility in the Age of AI
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:00pm - 3:30pm EDT
What are students missing when course content relies on visuals, audio, or interactions they cannot fully access? In this session, participants will experience accessibility from a student perspective through a live demonstration. We’ll explore how AI can generate audio descriptions and how instructors can refine them to ensure clarity and meaning. Framed around an “AI-assisted, human-powered” approach, this session highlights practical ways to design more inclusive, multimodal learning experiences that better support all students.
Speakers
avatar for David Greene

David Greene

Harmonize Learning
Sponsors
avatar for Harmonize Learning

Harmonize Learning

Harmonize Learning

Thursday June 11, 2026 3:00pm - 3:30pm EDT
Desoto 5

3:00pm EDT

What Are Students Really Learning About AI Before College? Five Lessons from K–12 and Their Impact on Higher Education
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:00pm - 3:30pm EDT
Over the past two to three years, many college faculty have been actively experimenting with AI alongside their students, rethinking assignments, assessment, and academic integrity in real time. But during this same period, what were K–12 students and teachers actually doing with AI? Drawing on five lessons learned from working with over 200 K–12 teachers in Northwest Florida through Florida State University’s InSPIRE Initiative, this session examines how uneven access, policy constraints, and instructional choices have shaped students’ AI experiences before college and how those experiences will increasingly impact teaching and learning in higher education.
Speakers
CM

Carrie Meyers

Learning Systems Institute, Florida State University
JR

James Reynolds

Learning Systems Institute, Florida State University

Thursday June 11, 2026 3:00pm - 3:30pm EDT
Suwannee 1

3:00pm EDT

How did you do that?: Guiding faculty through OER creation with AI
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:00pm - 3:30pm EDT
This Faculty Learning Community (FLC) brought together instructors who were eager to push the boundaries of how emerging AI tools could reimagine open educational resources (OER). The participants dug into their selected courses, teaming up with AI to create, adapt, and elevate their materials in imaginative new ways. Throughout the experience, the instructors tinkered with model parameters, crafted inventive prompting strategies, and transformed familiar assets—syllabi, slides, lecture notes—into lively, shareable OER that now feel genuinely new. With support from UF experts in AI and instructional design across the university, participants will share their innovative outputs with the UF teaching community at two university conferences this spring.
Speakers
RR

Ryan Rushing

University of Florida
avatar for Heather Young

Heather Young

Instructional Assistant Professor, University of Florida
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:00pm - 3:30pm EDT
Desoto 3

3:00pm EDT

Advancing Institutional AI Readiness through Faculty Development and Student Partnerships
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:00pm - 3:30pm EDT
How can institutions support faculty in teaching with AI responsibly and creatively? This session shares how one university’s Center for Teaching and Learning is advancing AI readiness through coordinated faculty development, campus dialogue, and a new Student Consultant on AI program. Discover how structured support, ethical guidance, and adaptable tools are enabling faculty to engage with AI with clarity and confidence. Participants will leave with practical ideas to strengthen institutional capacity and build supportive communities around AI-enhanced teaching and learning.
Speakers
avatar for Ursula N. Sorensen

Ursula N. Sorensen

Center for Teaching and Learning, Brigham Young University

Thursday June 11, 2026 3:00pm - 3:30pm EDT
Coastal 9

3:30pm EDT

Canoeing the Mountains in the AI Era
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:30pm - 3:40pm EDT
The leadership terrain has changed. This fast-paced, 10-minute talk adapts the "Canoeing the Mountains" metaphor for k-12 and higher ed leaders navigating the uncharted territory of AI. Learn to move beyond seeing AI as a threat and embrace it as a "Strategic Collaborator." We'll introduce a 3-step model (Reframe–Redesign–Recommit) to help you amplify human judgment and lead with purpose.Keywords: #AILeadership #AdaptiveLeadership #StrategicCollaborator
Speakers
avatar for Nathan C. Hamblin, Ph.D., Ed.D.

Nathan C. Hamblin, Ph.D., Ed.D.

Dean of the School of Leadership | College of Education and Leadership, University of the Cumberlands
I serve as Dean of the School of Leadership at the University of the Cumberlands, where I lead doctoral and graduate programs supporting more than 1,000 students and 60+ faculty. As a scholar-practitioner and former P–12 educator with more than 35 years in education, my work focuses... Read More →
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:30pm - 3:40pm EDT
Coastal Ballroom

3:40pm EDT

From AI Uncertainty to Practical Guardrails for Teaching and Learning
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:10pm EDT
AI has introduced new challenges across higher education: how to support learning, protect integrity, assess students fairly, and provide meaningful feedback without adding more burden to faculty. This session will explore how institutions can move from reactive AI policies to practical, learning-centered guardrails. Apporto will share a framework for addressing these challenges across the academic lifecycle, including responsible student support, deeper instructor feedback, clearer evidence of authentic work, and secure assessment environments that help campuses turn AI from uncertainty into a guided, responsible learning experience.
Speakers Sponsors
avatar for Apporto

Apporto

Apporto

Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:10pm EDT
Desoto 2

3:40pm EDT

Beyond “Allowed” or “Banned”: Teaching Responsible AI Use Through Transparency, Verification, and Student Ownership
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:10pm EDT
Faculty are increasingly expected to integrate AI into teaching while preserving academic integrity and authentic student learning. This session offers a faculty-centered discussion of the lived classroom realities of student generative AI use—particularly the “AI confidence problem,” in which AI-generated writing can sound polished and authoritative while containing oversimplifications and missing nuance. Participants will reflect on common faculty challenges including uncertainty about student authorship and the emotional labor associated with trust and accountability in AI-enabled classrooms.Rather than framing AI as simply “allowed” or “banned,” this presentation proposes a values-driven approach to responsible AI use grounded in three core principles: transparency, verification, and student ownership of learning. The session shares a case study of redesigning an undergraduate writing assignment on culturally informed end-of-life communication. The redesign requires students to generate an AI response (Part 1) and then complete a structured credibility audit (Part 2) by identifying missed nuance or inaccuracies using five academic sources and a “claim → source → correction” method.
Speakers
avatar for Toby Brooks

Toby Brooks

Director, Academy for Teaching & Learning, Baylor University
avatar for Ashley Barrett

Ashley Barrett

Full Professor in Communication, Baylor University
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:10pm EDT
Lafayette 1

3:40pm EDT

AI and the Apocalypse: Saving the Human Voice from Annihilation
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:10pm EDT
This presentation showcases Ethical AI for English Composition, a Canvas-based instructional module designed to integrate artificial intelligence into college composition curricula. Aligned with ENC1101/1102 competencies, the module equips instructors and students with ethical, practical approaches to AI-supported writing, research, and revision. Featuring scaffolded activities, policy guidance, and authentic writing comparisons, the project demonstrates how AI can enhance rhetorical awareness, critical thinking, and writing pedagogy at scale.
Speakers
TF

Tricia Foster

Faculty, Miami Dade College
AK

Alicia K. Garcia

Assistant Professor, Miami Dade College
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:10pm EDT
Suwannee 4
  AI in Pedagogy and Curriculum Design, 30-Minute Session
  • Co-Author(s) Liza Greenberg, Miami Dade College

3:40pm EDT

Bots, Not Slop: How a Custom Bot Helps Students Revise, Reflect, and Improve
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:10pm EDT
This session offers a fast, practical look at building custom student-facing bots that support real learning instead of producing “slop.” Using CapBot (a bot for my Capstone course that provides more general feedback and help with assignments) and CapBot PA (a bot that provides research paper assistance using my rubrics and APA guidelines), I’ll demo how rubric-aligned coaching, structured prompts, and strategic refusals guide students through revision, self-checking, and reflection while keeping the work theirs. I’ll also share how I designed the bots to support competence, autonomy, and relatedness, so students feel more capable, more in control, and more engaged with the course.#rubric-aligned feedback #custom bot #self-determination theory
Speakers
avatar for Erica Noles

Erica Noles

University of North Carolina Wilmington
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:10pm EDT
Suwannee 3

3:40pm EDT

Designing with Nuance: Preparing Students for an AI-Mediated Information Landscape
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:10pm EDT
Generative AI often places educators in a binary of total adoption or total avoidance. This presentation offers a middle path, exploring how to design nuanced assignments that enable students to explore practical AI applications while critically examining how these technologies reshape information, knowledge, authorship, ownership, and creativity. By highlighting carefully designed labs, the session demonstrates how instructors can guide students through sustained reflection. Participants will gain instructional strategies to help students maintain agency and a critical perspective in an increasingly AI-mediated world. #ai-literacy #student-agency #assignment-design
Speakers
avatar for Amandajean F. Nolte

Amandajean F. Nolte

Arts and Humanities Librarian, University of Northern Iowa
Amandajean (Aj) Freking Nolte (she/her/hers) is the Arts and Humanities Librarian and an Assistant Professor at the University of Northern Iowa Rod Library. In this role, she supports teaching, learning, and research across the arts and humanities departments. Aj is passionate about... Read More →
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:10pm EDT
Coastal 10

3:40pm EDT

What Students Learn With—and Without—AI: A Practical Teaching Framework
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:10pm EDT
As AI tools rapidly enter college classrooms, faculty are challenged to integrate them without weakening learning, critical thinking, or academic integrity. This session introduces UMAIT (Unveiling the Marketing AI Toolbox), a practical teaching framework that asks students to complete core assignments with and without AI. Participants will explore a classroom example, examine assessment implications, and gain transferable strategies for adapting the framework across disciplines and modalities. The session emphasizes responsible AI use, learning-centered design, and faculty-ready implementation.#AIinPedagogy #AIFluency #AcademicIntegrity
Speakers
avatar for Milagros Sanoja

Milagros Sanoja

Miami Dade College
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:10pm EDT
Lafayette 3

3:40pm EDT

Karaoke, Call-Ins, and Mic Drops: Amplifying Student Voice with AI
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:10pm EDT
Faculty across disciplines are moving beyond traditional written assignments and adopting audio and media projects that amplify student voice and perspective. Podcasts and other audio-based assignments have become increasingly popular, but media projects can unintentionally prioritize production quality more than student thinking. This session explores how audio assignment formats, including spoken-word karaoke, radio call-ins, and short op-eds, keep student ideas at the center. Using free features available in Adobe Podcast and Microsoft Clipchamp as demonstration tools, participants will explore how AI-supported audio cleanup, captioning, and avatar-based narration can streamline accessible media production while lowering technical barriers for students. Participants will leave with adaptable assignment ideas and a ready-to-use choice board that lowers technical barriers while increasing engagement and expression.
Speakers
avatar for Alissa Harrington

Alissa Harrington

Instructional Designer and Technologist, Towson University
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:10pm EDT
Lafayette 5

3:40pm EDT

Scale Academic Success with Responsible AI
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:10pm EDT
Explore how Sharpen Advantage, McGraw Hill’s AI study and academic success app, combines an extensive library of vetted academic resources with your institution’s content to create personalized, responsible AI study support that students can access right on their phones. Learn how faculty and administrators use instant insights into student performance and predictive outcomes to drive early intervention, lower DFW rates, and boost student success. 
Speakers
avatar for Heidi Allwood

Heidi Allwood

Institutional Partnerships, Florida, McGraw Hill
Sponsors
avatar for McGraw Hill

McGraw Hill

McGraw Hill

Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:10pm EDT
Desoto 3

3:40pm EDT

What AI-Ready Actually Looks Like: Designing Assignments Where the Process Is the Proof
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:10pm EDT
“AI-ready” gets used as a slogan more than a design goal. We’ll show what it looks like inside an actual assignment. Walk through a Peer Review activity using Acai Feedback Coach to scaffold review quality in real time, a Reflection Coach prompt that captures student reasoning between drafts, and a Rubric Assistant plus Grading Assistant pairing that helps instructors design and implement these activities at scale.

The result: process assignments that students can’t fake, and that instructors can actually grade.

Speakers
avatar for Andy Toshniwal

Andy Toshniwal

Account Executive, Account Executive

avatar for Bas Hintemann

Bas Hintemann

Chief Strategy Officer, Feedback Fruits

Sponsors
avatar for Feedback Fruits

Feedback Fruits

Feedback Fruits

Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:10pm EDT
Lafayette 4

3:40pm EDT

Why AI Training Isn't Enough: The Hidden Gap Between Faculty Awareness and Institutional Change.
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:10pm EDT
Your faculty know about AI. They've attended workshops. They have policies. So why hasn't your institution transformed? Two years of data revealed a stark truth: tactical training creates pockets of excellence surrounded by vast territories of uncertainty. This workshop shares the longitudinal evidence that exposed the engagement gap—and how it led to building a strategic AI center. Leave with a framework to assess whether your institution is truly ready for AI integration or stuck in perpetual transition. (institutional readiness, engagement gap, AI implementation)
Speakers
avatar for Jessica Stansbury

Jessica Stansbury

Founding Director, Center for AI Learning and Community-Engaged Innovation, University of Baltimore
I am the Director of Teaching and Learning Excellence and co-director of the Bank of America Center for Excellence in Learning, Teaching and Technology, and Founding Director of the Center for AI-Driven Learning and Community-Engaged Innovation (CAILI) at the University of Baltimore... Read More →
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:10pm EDT
Desoto 5

3:40pm EDT

Developing an Ethical AI Ecosystem
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:10pm EDT
The purpose of this presentation is to share with other institutions the successes and challenges of developing an AI training module for faculty consumption. The College of Innovation and Design at East Texas A&M University offers all online asynchronous instruction with many part-time instructors from many fields. Within our learning management system, we have developed lessons specifically for faculty around generative AI. This includes topics, such as, What is Gen AI? How does Gen AI work? And most importantly, how to talk to students about the improper use of Gen AI. There is also a section on how to recognize Gen AI, as well as guidelines faculty can use in their courses.
Speakers
TL

Tina Lancaster

East Texas A&M University
GS

George Swindell

East Texas A&M University
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:10pm EDT
Suwannee 2

3:40pm EDT

Building an AI Innovation Culture: Lessons Learned in a Hospitality College
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:10pm EDT
This session presents a reflection of efforts to build an AI innovation culture within a large hospitality college. I will describe the initiatives that invited faculty to dream and pilot, alongside uneven engagement, the risks and realities of incomplete innovation, and the unintended consequences that followed. Framed through an "unlearning" lens, this session highlights emerging lessons about faculty buy-in, culture change, and the quest for sustainable practices that inform AI integration across diverse teaching and learning contexts.
Speakers
avatar for Cynthia Mejia

Cynthia Mejia

Dean, UCF Rosen College of Hospitality Management
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:10pm EDT
Coastal 9

3:40pm EDT

Beyond the Prompt: Building a "Course Architect" Agent for Automated Alignment to Pedagogical Standards and Full-Spectrum Curricular Development
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:10pm EDT
Moving from "chatting" with AI to building a functional "agent" requires a shift in mindset from prompt engineering to systems design. This session shares a case study of developing a "course architect" agent capable of transforming course materials into a comprehensive 16-week instructional ecosystem. By grounding the agent’s outputs in specific instructor content rather than the generalized training of general-purpose LLMs, the architecture ensures pedagogical authority of the instructor. The session will demonstrate a workflow that generates a robust suite of LMS-ready outputs, all validated against national quality assurance benchmarks. The session addresses the "developer’s dilemma" by offering a comparative evaluation of leading GenAI platforms in developing purpose-built “course-architect” agents. 
Speakers
MA

Muhammad Adeel

UNT Dallas
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:10pm EDT
Desoto 1

3:40pm EDT

From Chaos to Order: Human vs. AI Analysis of Library Chats
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:10pm EDT
Broader adoption of chat reference tools has led to increased access to unstructured data, revealing patron needs and question trends. To utilize this information to the fullest requires careful analysis of the transcripts - from navigating privacy concerns to identifying user themes. This workshop will walk through the process of how we developed a custom-built, offline, AI-powered tool to help with transcript analysis. We begin by comparing our solution to a baseline, human analysis of our text followed by a side by side comparison to pre-built LLMs such as Gemini, to determine which method was most effective.
Speakers
avatar for Andrew Carlos

Andrew Carlos

Head of Research, Outreach, and Inclusion, Santa Clara university
avatar for Sophia Mosbe

Sophia Mosbe

Applied Sciences Librarian, Santa Clara University
She/her/hers
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:10pm EDT
Desoto 4

3:40pm EDT

Beyond the Syllabus: Leveraging Generative AI for Competency-Based Business Curricula
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:10pm EDT
Generative AI can enhance the development of competency-based education (CBE) courses, which prioritize personalized learning and mastery over traditional time-based methods. A major challenge to widespread CBE adoption is the administrative burden of aligning industry-specific skills with learning outcomes. We introduce a "Prompt to Competency" framework that uses AI to streamline course design through three key stages: (1) identifying current labor market demands, (2) aligning these demands with competencies using Bloom's Taxonomy, and (3) creating adaptive, rubric-based assessments. Preliminary results show that utilizing AI in curriculum development can reduce design time by about 60% while ensuring strong alignment with industry standards, thus enhancing the scalability and effectiveness of CBE models.
Speakers
avatar for Dwight Heaster

Dwight Heaster

Associate Professor of Business Administration, Glenville State University
Dr. Dwight W. Heaster is an Associate Professor of Business and former administrative leader (Dean and Department Chair) with over 25 years of experience in higher education marketing, branding, and curriculum design. Holding a Ph.D. that bridges business and adult education pedagogy... Read More →
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:10pm EDT
Suwannee 1

3:40pm EDT

AI Playground
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:40pm EDT
Stop by and join us for demos on various AI tools! These demos do not include advanced techniques but serve as a tool comparison and provide insights into functionalities using quick examples. Bring your questions, and we'll do our best to provide answers and demonstrations. The stations and presenters are below:

ChatGPT
Dylan Yonts, University of Central Florida

AI Studio
Rebecca McNulty, University of Central Florida

Copilot - Microsoft Copilot: What Are Students Really Doing with AI?
Jenny Skelton, University of Southern Indiana

Claude
Emanuel Cortes Lugo, University of Central Florida

Gemini - Make an AI-enhanced mini app with Gemini Canvas in 10 minutes
Daniel Ruelle, VinUniversity
Speakers
avatar for Jennifer Skelton

Jennifer Skelton

Assistant Professor, University of Southern Indiana
avatar for Daniel Ruelle

Daniel Ruelle

Director: Teaching and Learning Excellence, VinUniversity
I am the director of Teaching and Learning and also a faculty in the College of Arts & Sciences, teaching communication subjects. I teach in Team-Based Learning (TBL) and of course have been experimenting with AI in teaching and learning, like all of us. If you ever come to Hanoi... Read More →
avatar for Emanuel Cortes Lugo

Emanuel Cortes Lugo

University of Central Florida

avatar for Rebecca McNulty

Rebecca McNulty

Instructional Designer, Center for Distributed Learning

Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:40pm EDT
Escambia

3:40pm EDT

Student Voice First: Redesigning Writing Courses for the AI Era Through Story, Scaffolding, and Human-Centered Learning
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:40pm EDT
The world students are writing in has changed dramatically. To remain relevant, writing instruction must move beyond finished products and toward the human thinking behind them. This workshop presents a redesigned first-year composition model that begins with student voice, builds toward academic reasoning through intentional scaffolding, and integrates AI as a transparent, purposeful tool rather than a shortcut. Participants will explore how narrative-centered opening units, process-based assignments, and structured peer interaction create conditions for genuine authorship before students engage with AI.Drawing from a community college composition course redesigned in 2025, the session highlights a multimodal “wizard-themed” learning environment that combines H5P interactive content with Harmonize tools—including PDF annotation, document-based peer review, multimodal project galleries, and video-based research defenses—to make student thinking visible throughout the writing process. H5P supports low-stakes practice, guided analysis, and metacognitive reflection, while Harmonize facilitates feedback-rich discussion around student-created work. Participants will examine course artifacts, sample activities, and redesign strategies that emphasize process over product, preserve student voice, and integrate AI in human-centered, transferable ways across disciplines. The session is structured as a hands-on workshop in which participants annotate sample texts, analyze and redesign assignments, examine AI-assisted brainstorming and revision, and leave with a revised, process-centered assignment ready for classroom use.
Speakers
avatar for Britt Honeycutt

Britt Honeycutt

Excellence in Teaching Coordinator, Sampson Community College
English instructor, department chair, and teaching excellence coordinator who believes online courses should feel like adventures. I love talking about AI in education, gamification, student engagement, interactive course design, and helping faculty use technology without losing the... Read More →
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:40pm EDT
Coastal 6

3:40pm EDT

Blending Tradition with Technology: AI-Enhanced Teaching Practices
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:40pm EDT
This poster examines how educators can integrate traditional pedagogy with AI-enhanced teaching to cultivate inclusive, engaging, and ethically informed learning environments. Grounded in research on faculty AI readiness (Mah & Groß, 2024), ethical frameworks (Swindell et al., 2024), engagement outcomes (Gada & Chudasama, 2024), and assessment innovation (Madwe et al., 2025), it presents a human-centered model linking constructivist teaching with emerging AI tools. Key elements include faculty AI literacy, ethical guardrails, and practical applications for adaptive instruction, empowering attendees to apply an evidence-based instructional framework across disciplines.This poster examines how educators can integrate traditional pedagogy with AI-enhanced teaching to cultivate inclusive, engaging, and ethically informed learning environments. Grounded in research on faculty AI readiness (Mah & Groß, 2024), ethical frameworks (Swindell et al., 2024), engagement outcomes (Gada & Chudasama, 2024), and assessment innovation (Madwe et al., 2025), it presents a human-centered model linking constructivist teaching with emerging AI tools. Key elements include faculty AI literacy, ethical guardrails, and practical applications for adaptive instruction, empowering attendees to apply an evidence-based instructional framework across disciplines.This poster examines how educators can integrate traditional pedagogy with AI-enhanced teaching to cultivate inclusive, engaging, and ethically informed learning environments. Grounded in research on faculty AI readiness (Mah & Groß, 2024), ethical frameworks (Swindell et al., 2024), engagement outcomes (Gada & Chudasama, 2024), and assessment innovation (Madwe et al., 2025), it presents a human-centered model linking constructivist teaching with emerging AI tools. Key elements include faculty AI literacy, ethical guardrails, and practical applications for adaptive instruction, empowering attendees to apply an evidence-based instructional framework across disciplines.
Speakers
MM

Melinda McIsaac

Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:40pm EDT
Escambia Hallway

3:40pm EDT

Designing Custom AI Research Assistants: Linguistics Cases with Cross-Disciplinary Applications
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:40pm EDT
This presentation introduces AI-powered Linguistics Research Assistants developed using ChatGPT, Claude, and Perplexity. Designed for academic research, these tools streamline data collection and analysis for both qualitative and quantitative investigations. One of such tools is the Subject Pronoun Variation AI Research Assistant. We demonstrate specifically with this custom-made AI tool how tailored prompts and workflows support real-world research projects in linguistics, language pedagogy, and related fields of inquiry. The session will showcase live examples of data extraction and coding. The session will also offer guidance on designing discipline-specific assistants. While grounded in linguistics, the approach is transferable across academic fields.#AITools #ResearchSupport #Humanities
Speakers
RO

Rafael Orozco

Louisiana State University
LV

Latasha Valenzuela

Louisiana State University
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:40pm EDT
Escambia Hallway
  Institutional Strategy and Leadership, Print Poster
  • Co-Author(s) Michael Dettinger, Louisiana State University

3:40pm EDT

Gamified AI Patient Simulations to Advance Clinical Reasoning in Undergraduate Genetics
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:40pm EDT
We present a gamified approach integrating generative AI into undergraduate genetics education. Students work in small groups to create AI-generated patients with unique personalities, demographics, living situations, and genetic conditions, all interconnected. They counsel patients through complex scenarios and complete diagnostic exercises with unknown AI cases, strengthening decision-making, critical thinking, and diagnostic reasoning. Preliminary survey data indicate this approach enhances engagement, ethical reflection, and preparedness for real-world clinician–patient interactions. This model demonstrates how AI can serve as an interactive, gamified pedagogical tool adaptable across disciplines.
Speakers
avatar for Lawrence Tartaglia

Lawrence Tartaglia

Lehigh University
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:40pm EDT
Coastal 8

3:40pm EDT

Beyond Prompts: Building Custom AI Tools for Your Campus
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:40pm EDT
Move beyond generic AI prompts to building custom tools for your faculty and students. This interactive workshop demonstrates how to develop discipline-specific AI applications using accessible platforms like ChatGPT, Claude, and Codepen—no coding experience required. Learn the complete development cycle: uploading institutional resources, iterative refinement, configuration, and deployment. Drawing from my experience, I'll share practical strategies for creating tools that address your unique teaching challenges. Participants will begin building their own AI tool during the session and leave with a deployment roadmap. #AI-tools #faculty-development #practical-AI
Speakers
avatar for Denice Robertson

Denice Robertson

Director Center for Excellence in Teaching and Innovation, Northern Kentucky University
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:40pm EDT
Coastal 7

3:40pm EDT

From Case Stories to Patterns: Using AI to Analyse Classroom Interventions
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:40pm EDT
Beginning and experienced teachers often report insufficient confidence and competencies when addressing challenging classroom behaviour, which may lead to frustration and professional dissatisfaction. This study shows that large language models (LLMs) can reliably classify pedagogical intervention strategies in case studies of challenging behaviour at a level comparable to trained teachers and researchers (Cohen’s κ = 0.64). Building on this finding, we introduce Edustories, a reflective, research-informed platform that enables teachers to analyse real classroom situations and explore alternative solutions. By combining human-centred reflection with LLM-supported analysis, Edustories supports professional learning, pedagogical confidence, and the development of positive classroom climate.
Speakers
avatar for David Kosatka

David Kosatka

UCF / Masaryk University
avatar for Markéta Košatková

Markéta Košatková

Assistant Professor, UCF
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:40pm EDT
Escambia Hallway

3:40pm EDT

Teaching Microbiology with Generative AI: Tips and Tools to Leverage Innovative AI Capabilities to Empower Microbiology Faculty to Integrate AI into Courses
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:40pm EDT
Microbiology faculty navigate a unique operational load, balancing complex theory with intensive laboratory logistics. Generative AI (GenAI) offers a transformative solution to increase instructional efficiency while deepening student engagement. This session provides a practical playbook for integrating GenAI through two frameworks: streamlining course design (instructor-focused) and fostering active learning (student-focused). From generating custom visuals and lab supply lists to "interviewing" pathogens through role-play, attendees will gain concrete prompts and strategies. Join us to learn how to lead the AI transition while safeguarding scientific reasoning and building essential AI literacy. #Pedagogy #GenerativeAI #ActiveLearning
Speakers
avatar for Jordan Steel

Jordan Steel

Associate Professor/ STEM Outreach Coordinator, United States Air Force Academy
avatar for Michael Barnhart

Michael Barnhart

United States Air Force Academy
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:40pm EDT
Escambia Hallway

3:40pm EDT

Well-Being as a Lever for AI Fluency: A Professional Learning Community Model for Faculty Professional Development
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:40pm EDT
AI proliferation outpaces training: leaving students unprepared and faculty under-supported and pressured.  We implemented a professional learning community (PLC) to accelerate cross-disciplinary AI fluency through workflow-embedded training, shared tools, and weekly peer accountability meetings. Trainings included bot-building and assignment creation using Boodlebox, CoPilot-based course material development, image-based bias analysis, Adobe-integrations for visual creation, and an Information Literacy framework to evaluate AI output and support instructional design. Participants reported concrete plans to revise courses, sustained motivation through supportive weekly engagement, and measurable progress from novice to expert. Attendees will leave with templates and a replication guide. #AI-fluency #faculty-development #professional learning communities.
Speakers
JK

J Kasi Jackson

West Virginia University
ZK

Zach Kinzler

Head of Sales Strategy, BoodleBox
Zach Kinzler, an education and AI enthusiast with a B.S. in Industrial Engineering and a Master's in Business Analytics from the University of San Diego, brings a distinctive perspective on integrating technology in learning environments. As host of the Smarter Campus Podcast and... Read More →
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:40pm EDT
Escambia Hallway

3:40pm EDT

The Robot Referee: GenAI and Wargaming at the United States Military Academy
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:40pm EDT
Since the founding of the United States Military Academy in 1802, aspiring officers have learned the art of war through the study of past campaigns and maps. Today, generative AI extends that tradition by serving as a referee and officiant, giving cadets the opportunity to explore the contingencies inherent in many of history’s great battles such as Austerlitz, Operation Overlord, and the campaigns of Guadalcanal.
Speakers
JM

James Martin

United States Military Academy
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:40pm - 4:40pm EDT
Escambia Hallway

3:50pm EDT

Leveraging Generative AI for Immersive Learning
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:50pm - 4:00pm EDT
Generative AI now allows for the creation of imaginary environments for virtual tours and virtual field trips. While these fictional environments do not replace the value of real settings, they offer unique cognitive, emotional, and pedagogical values. Real places come with students’ preconceived ideas, stereotypes, and/or partial knowledge, while a fictional environment, allows students approach the content with cognitive openness, rather than relying on existing biases, knowledge, or attempting to recall memorized facts. This session will cover the use of AI immersive learning experiences as effective tools for enhancing student engagement, understanding, and skill development.
Speakers
avatar for Sara Evans

Sara Evans

Kennesaw State University
Thursday June 11, 2026 3:50pm - 4:00pm EDT
Coastal Ballroom

4:20pm EDT

AI, Choice, and Voice: What Happens when AI Enters the Rhetorical Situation?
Thursday June 11, 2026 4:20pm - 4:50pm EDT
This presentation explores activities that help students examine how AI impacts credibility, agency, and rhetorical choices regarding audience, purpose, context, and writer. Central to these assignments is a course outcome: analyzing how systemic inequalities shape the formal and informal rules defining “good” and “bad” writing. The assignments ask students to consider: whose rules does AI learn, enforce, and normalize? Students analyze AI use in dating apps and social media activism to see how audiences perceive both content and writer, then transfer these insights to academic sources and their own writing.
Speakers
avatar for Wendy Swyt

Wendy Swyt

Faculty: English, honors, and college studies, Highline College
Thursday June 11, 2026 4:20pm - 4:50pm EDT
Desoto 3

4:20pm EDT

Accessible by Design: Leveraging AI for Inclusive Education
Thursday June 11, 2026 4:20pm - 4:50pm EDT
This session explores applying Universal Design for Learning (UDL) principles through AI to support students with disabilities and promote inclusive teaching. We’ll share scenarios demonstrating how AI tools enhance accessibility, enable adaptive learning, and integrate assistive technologies such as speech-to-text and alternative text generators. Attendees will see live demonstrations of free tools, learn about funded options, and gain practical strategies for implementation in their own contexts. Designed for librarians but relevant to all educators, the session concludes with a Q&A focused on real-world applications and invites audience collaboration. Presenters are academic librarians from two institutions.Keywords: Accessibility, Universal Design for Learning, AI Tools for Inclusive Learning
Speakers
RW

Rebecca Weber

Oklahoma State University
avatar for Lauren Kehoe

Lauren Kehoe

Head of Research Engagement, University of Central Florida
Thursday June 11, 2026 4:20pm - 4:50pm EDT
Suwannee 3

4:20pm EDT

Surfing the Wave: AI Literacy and Research Navigation
Thursday June 11, 2026 4:20pm - 4:50pm EDT
While generative AI rapidly expands its educational reach, writing instructors remain the most cautious and at times resistant adopters, due to concerns about authorship, plagiarism, and cognitive offloading.   In response, the AI Literacy module was designed for the English 102 Composition course to frame generative AI tools as process-oriented research partners rather than a text-producing shortcut.  NotebookLM is used as a constrained research environment for a research workflow in which students' original thinking precedes AI interaction. The framework demonstrates pedagogically grounded AI use that supports transparency, metacognition, and ethical research practices, thereby strengthening rhetorical awareness, ensuring authorial control, and minimizing plagiarism (#AI-Literacy #AI-assisted-research #metacognition).
Speakers
avatar for Tatiana Sazonova

Tatiana Sazonova

Professor, Richard J Daley College
Thursday June 11, 2026 4:20pm - 4:50pm EDT
Desoto 4

4:20pm EDT

Beyond ChatGPT: Creative Approaches to AI Learning in Libraries
Thursday June 11, 2026 4:20pm - 4:50pm EDT
In this presentation, two librarians will share how they developed AI programming that goes beyond tool demos & large language models. Through five different events and workshops, students were invited to engage with a diverse slate of offerings that highlighted creative ideation and experimentation, mental health, & integrity in scholarly publishing. The presentation will discuss the collaborations and planning that went into each event, as well as each event’s successes and lessons learned. Participants can expect to leave with ideas, strategies, and resources for creating similar programs at their own institutions.
Speakers
avatar for Kristy Borda

Kristy Borda

Research Librarian for the Sciences and Instructional Strategy, North Carolina State University Libraries
avatar for Laquanda M. Fields

Laquanda M. Fields

Libraries Fellow, NC State University Libraries

Thursday June 11, 2026 4:20pm - 4:50pm EDT
Suwannee 4

4:20pm EDT

We Say “AI Literacy”… But What Are We Teaching and Grading?
Thursday June 11, 2026 4:20pm - 4:50pm EDT
AI literacy is quickly becoming a stated goal for first-year students, but translating that goal into clear learner outcomes and assessable work is far from simple. This short, discussion-driven session shares the structure of an undergraduate AI literacy course, focusing on its learner outcomes and assessments. Participants will collaboratively reflect on whether these outcomes reflect what AI literacy should mean for freshmen and whether it is even possible to assess such learning in authentic ways.
Speakers
avatar for Angela Walters

Angela Walters

Professor, Fort Hays State University
connecting majors in computer networking, management information systems, digital media, web development, cybersecurity, and information assurance with the KC tech scene
Thursday June 11, 2026 4:20pm - 4:50pm EDT
Suwannee 1

4:20pm EDT

The AI Leadership Paradox: When Better Questions Are The Answer
Thursday June 11, 2026 4:20pm - 4:50pm EDT
What if there are no solutions (yet) to the questions AI pose to disciplinary learning environments?  Campus leadership and administrators face an impossible challenge: provide clear guidance, frameworks, and solutions, at scale, to the many dynamic challenges emerging AI technologies pose. Drawing on leadership experience from Ohio State University’s AI Fluency initiative, this session will demonstrate how a desire to find “solutions” paradoxically hindered progress by stifling the disciplinary inquiry necessary to address these continually evolving challenges. Session participants will explore leadership and pedagogical practices for resisting pressure to find solutions and instead create conditions where better questions emerge. What if there are no solutions (yet) to the questions AI pose to disciplinary learning environments?  Campus leadership and administrators face an impossible challenge: provide clear guidance, frameworks, and solutions, at scale, to the many dynamic challenges emerging AI technologies pose. Drawing on leadership experience from Ohio State University’s AI Fluency initiative, this session will demonstrate how a desire to find “solutions” paradoxically hindered progress by stifling the disciplinary inquiry necessary to address these continually evolving challenges. Session participants will explore leadership and pedagogical practices for resisting pressure to find solutions and instead create conditions where better questions emerge. What if there are no solutions (yet) to the questions AI pose to disciplinary learning environments?  Campus leadership and administrators face an impossible challenge: provide clear guidance, frameworks, and solutions, at scale, to the many dynamic challenges emerging AI technologies pose. Drawing on leadership experience from Ohio State University’s AI Fluency initiative, this session will demonstrate how a desire to find “solutions” paradoxically hindered progress by stifling the disciplinary inquiry necessary to address these continually evolving challenges. Session participants will explore leadership and pedagogical practices for resisting pressure to find solutions and instead create conditions where better questions emerge. 
Speakers
MF

Michael Flierl

Ohio State University

Thursday June 11, 2026 4:20pm - 4:50pm EDT
Desoto 5

4:20pm EDT

Moving from Loss to Possibility: A Human-Centered Framework for AI Adoption in Higher Education
Thursday June 11, 2026 4:20pm - 4:50pm EDT
When AI reshapes how we teach and learn, institutions don't just face technical transitions, they face human ones. Drawing on grief theory, change management research, and real-world implementation experience from the University of Florida, this session offers faculty, instructional designers, and administrators a practical framework for navigating the human side of technological evolution. Presenters will explore acknowledgment, community, and agency as antidotes to resistance and uncertainty, leaving attendees with actionable strategies to lead their institutions through technological evolution with empathy and purpose.
Speakers
NR

Nico Rose

The University of Florida
Sponsors
avatar for D2L

D2L

D2L

Thursday June 11, 2026 4:20pm - 4:50pm EDT
Suwannee 2

4:20pm EDT

From Policy to Practice: An Institutional Strategy for Advancing GenAI Fluency
Thursday June 11, 2026 4:20pm - 4:50pm EDT
As the applications of GenAI within postsecondary education continue to evolve, the need for promoting GenAI fluency among all university constituents is critical. We will open this interactive session by using a think-pair-share exercise to introduce the Scaffolded Artificial Intelligence Literary (SAIL) framework and explore its relevance to designing institutional GenAI principles and policies. We will then establish connections between these principles/policies and outcomes associated with implementation of a GenAI faculty, staff, and graduate student/postdoc professional development opportunity on our campus, prompting attendees to reflect on how they might apply what they have learned in their own contexts.
Speakers
LA

Luciana Arronche

Lehigh University
avatar for Jeffrey T. Olimpo

Jeffrey T. Olimpo

Lehigh University

Thursday June 11, 2026 4:20pm - 4:50pm EDT
Lafayette 4

4:20pm EDT

The Multimodal Video Evaluator (MVE): Codifying Decades of Empirical Research into a Systematic Multimedia Design & Evaluation Framework
Thursday June 11, 2026 4:20pm - 4:50pm EDT
Despite decades of empirical research in multimedia learning, many higher ed videos often suffer from "Death by PowerPoint"—cluttered, cognitively taxing, hindering learning and learner engagement. This session introduces the Multimodal Video Evaluator (MVE), a custom AI bot designed to close the research-practice divide by translating scientific research into an automated, systematic pedagogical auditor. The MVE codifies a 15-year synthesis of the Cognitive Theory of Multimedia Learning (CTML) and video engagement studies into 127 actionable design guidelines.
By replacing pedagogical guesswork with a systematic approach to rapid design-revision cycles, the MVE empowers educators to systematically transform passive, distracting slides into high-impact visual tools that significantly improve student comprehension, memory retention, and learner engagement.
To foster institutional adaptation, I will reveal the MVE’s full design architecture, including its specialized knowledgebase and system prompt. I will discuss calibration features used to ensure accurate and consistent auditing and prevent hallucinations of generic AI. By sharing these internal blueprints, I provide attendees with the technical and pedagogical insights needed to replicate and refine this work at their own institutions, moving AI from an efficiency tool to a framework for quality assurance and competency building for faculty, instructional designers, and students.

My Substack Publication "eLearning Expert": https://elearningexpert.substack.com/  
My LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/k0ichisat0/ 

Speakers
avatar for Koichi Sato

Koichi Sato

University of South Florida, University of South Florida
Hello! I am Dr. Koichi Sato—aka Dr. eLearning.
I serve as a Learning Designer at the University of South Florida, where my daily mission is to apply “design magic” to instructional expertise to improve student learning outcomes. With an EdD in online learning, I have spent m... Read More →
Thursday June 11, 2026 4:20pm - 4:50pm EDT
Lafayette 1

4:20pm EDT

"I Don't Know Yet": Building Communities Where Faculty Can Think Out Loud About AI
Thursday June 11, 2026 4:20pm - 4:50pm EDT
In the rush to meet the AI moment, it’s easy to default to one-off faculty trainings focused on how-to, but we took a different approach. The real challenge isn't knowledge; it's creating spaces where educators can safely admit uncertainty and explore messy questions together. This session shares a replicable Generative AI Communities of Practice model from the University System of Maryland's Fellows program. We demonstrate how to design collaborative structures that invite the difficult conversations faculty need and develop faculty leadership, empowering fellows to lead workshops for colleagues. Participants leave with a starter kit for launching their own inquiry communities.(#Communities-of-Practice, #Faculty-Leadership, #Collaborative-Learning)
Speakers
avatar for Jennifer Potter

Jennifer Potter

Associate Director, Kirwan Center for Academic Innovation, University System of Maryland
Thursday June 11, 2026 4:20pm - 4:50pm EDT
Lafayette 5
  Practical AI Tools/Agents and Implementation, 30-Minute Session |   AI Fluency and Faculty Development, 30-Minute Session
  • Co-Author(s) Tracy Tomlinson (University of Maryland, College Park), Diane Alonso (University of Maryland Baltimore County)

4:20pm EDT

Using AI Tools in Canvas: Practical Teaching Strategies
Thursday June 11, 2026 4:20pm - 4:50pm EDT
Generative AI is reshaping how teaching and learning take place. In this session, I will share how I use AI tools in Canvas, including conversational bots, grammar support, and adaptive reading activities, to support student learning and engagement. These tools help reduce planning time while giving students more opportunities to practice and receive immediate feedback.
Speakers
avatar for Nicolas Hanhan

Nicolas Hanhan

Instructional Technology Coordinator, Arizona Western College
Nicolas Hanhan is an Instructional Technology Coordinator and Arabic language instructor at Arizona Western College. With over a decade of experience in higher education, he specializes in technology integration, online curriculum design, and faculty development. Nicolas has led numerous... Read More →
Thursday June 11, 2026 4:20pm - 4:50pm EDT
Lafayette 3

4:20pm EDT

Teaching What AI Cannot Do: Reimagining Human Competencies in Higher Education
Thursday June 11, 2026 4:20pm - 4:50pm EDT
In an AI-saturated future, what will make higher education indispensable is not what students know, but how they think, create, and connect. This session explores how AI shifts the center of learning from memorizing facts to cultivating critical judgment, ethical reasoning, collaboration, and reflective practice. Together, we will consider what cross-contextual competencies, including communication, collaboration, interpersonal skills, and other transferable professional skills students most need, and how to design learning experiences that foreground those skills. The session will also offer concrete strategies and guiding questions to support instructors in reimagining courses for an AI-augmented world. (#AI-augmented learning, #human-centered competencies, #faculty development)
Speakers
avatar for Elle Corvette

Elle Corvette

Director of Faculty Development and Immersive Learning, William Peace University
Thursday June 11, 2026 4:20pm - 4:50pm EDT
Coastal 10

4:20pm EDT

Developing an AI Toolbox for Your Classroom
Thursday June 11, 2026 4:20pm - 4:50pm EDT
As artificial intelligence becomes increasingly embedded in education, faculty must move beyond awareness toward purposeful, ethical, and inclusive classroom application. This session introduces an “AI Toolbox” approach that helps instructors select, evaluate, and deploy AI tools to support diverse learners, instructional goals, and assessment strategies. Participants will explore examples of AI use for content creation, accessibility, formative feedback, and student engagement while maintaining academic integrity and pedagogical rigor.#AIinEducation #FacultyDevelopment #InclusiveTeaching
Speakers
avatar for Melissa Brooks

Melissa Brooks

Business Instructor, Hillsborough College
Dr. Brooks has had the opportunity to live and travel around the world (86 Moves). She has taught in China, in Cuba, and through online partnerships in Jordan & Israel. She has been teaching for 20+ years. She is an active-duty Military Spouse. She has a diverse background in education... Read More →
Thursday June 11, 2026 4:20pm - 4:50pm EDT
Lafayette 2

5:00pm EDT

Happy Hour
Thursday June 11, 2026 5:00pm - 6:00pm EDT

Thursday June 11, 2026 5:00pm - 6:00pm EDT
Coastal Ballroom

5:00pm EDT

Trivia
Thursday June 11, 2026 5:00pm - 6:00pm EDT
Put your knowledge to the test at Trivia Night! Gather a team or join one on the spot and compete across a mix of categories! Each round offers a chance to show off your expertise, think on your feet, and have fun with friends and fellow participants. Bragging rights await the top teams, but the real reward is the lively energy and shared excitement. Whether you’re a trivia buff or just here for the laughs, this event is designed to be accessible and engaging for all.

Speakers
avatar for Rachel Vacek

Rachel Vacek

Associate Dean for Digital Strategies, Impact, & Visibility, University of Central Florida
Thursday June 11, 2026 5:00pm - 6:00pm EDT
Coastal 6

6:00pm EDT

Speed Networking
Thursday June 11, 2026 6:00pm - 7:00pm EDT
Make meaningful connections and fast! This Speed Networking event brings together attendees for a series of brief, focused conversations. Share your projects, ideas, challenges, and successes, discover new collaborators, and leave with fresh perspectives and contacts to support your work.
Speakers
avatar for Mary Rubin

Mary Rubin

University of Central Florida
Thursday June 11, 2026 6:00pm - 7:00pm EDT
Coastal 7

6:00pm EDT

PowerPoint Karaoke
Thursday June 11, 2026 6:00pm - 8:00pm EDT
Step into the spotlight with PowerPoint Karaoke, a dynamic, fast-paced presentation experience that blends creativity, humor, and spontaneity. For PowerPoint Karaoke, participants present 20 slides they’ve never seen before, improvising as they go, having only 20 seconds per slide to talk. The result is an entertaining mix of insightful, unexpected, and often hilarious moments. Whether you’re presenting or cheering from the audience, this event celebrates storytelling, quick thinking, and the joy of trying something new.

Speakers
avatar for Rachel Vacek

Rachel Vacek

Associate Dean for Digital Strategies, Impact, & Visibility, University of Central Florida
Thursday June 11, 2026 6:00pm - 8:00pm EDT
Coastal 9
 


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