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Teaching and Learning with AI Conference
Venue: Lafayette 3 clear filter
Thursday, June 11
 

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

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

3:40pm 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

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
 
Friday, June 12
 

9:00am EDT

AI-Informed, Not AI-Driven: A Framework for Responsible Course Redesign
Friday June 12, 2026 9:00am - 9:30am EDT
As AI tools become increasingly embedded in course design workflows, the question isn't just whether to use them, it's how to use them responsibly and ethically. This session explores the UCF RN-BSN program's partnership with iDesign to redesign 17 fully online, accelerated and compressed nursing courses. Attendees will learn how an "AI-informed, AI-supported" framework keeps human experts in control of content decisions while AI handles alignment checks, workload calibration, and quality assurance. Ethical considerations are built into the workflow, with humans maintaining authority over academic and content choices at every stage. The session offers a transferable model for institutions navigating AI adoption without sacrificing academic oversight.
Speakers
avatar for Whitney Kilgore

Whitney Kilgore

Cofounder & CAO, iDesign
Whitney is the Chief Academic Officer at iDesign working with institutions of higher education to build high quality online and blended learning programs. Her primary areas of focus are faculty professional development, personalized adaptive digital content, and learner engagement... Read More →
avatar for Amanda Major

Amanda Major

Assistant Program Director, University of Central Florida
Amanda Major, EdD, PMP, ACP, CPTD has experience delivering results in higher education digital learning. She brings to her role as an assistant program director for the University of Central Florida's Pegasus Innovation Lab experience as a higher education faculty, staff, and administrator... Read More →
Sponsors
avatar for iDesign

iDesign

iDesign

Friday June 12, 2026 9:00am - 9:30am EDT
Lafayette 3

9:40am EDT

How do we navigate students’ perception of AI replacing workers?
Friday June 12, 2026 9:40am - 10:10am EDT
As AI becomes more embedded in workplaces, students face growing uncertainty about their job search, job security, and shifting role expectations. Headlines often amplify fears of AI replacing workers, yet the reality is more nuanced: students must build in-demand skills, navigate psychological safety, and prepare for ongoing reskilling. This session examines how AI shapes students’ future employment experiences through role identity, role conflict, and role ambivalence. Participants will explore how these dynamics influence student attitudes and how higher education leaders can reduce fear, strengthen adaptability, and empower students for a transforming workforce.Keywords: AI Literacy in Higher Education, Student Career Development, Future‑Ready Skills
Speakers
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John Sherlock

Professor, Western Carolina University
Friday June 12, 2026 9:40am - 10:10am EDT
Lafayette 3
  AI in Pedagogy and Curriculum Design, 30-Minute Session
  • Co-Author(s) Sarah Minnis, Western Carolina University

10:20am EDT

A Human-Centered AI Strategy for Faculty Development
Friday June 12, 2026 10:20am - 10:50am EDT
How do we cultivate AI literacy across the full spectrum of faculty readiness—from apprehensive to advancing? This session unveils a human-centered, data-informed AI strategy developed at Fort Lewis College, a rural NASNTI institution. Grounded in faculty survey data and responsive to the unique needs of Native American-serving contexts, our approach employs two complementary frameworks—an AI Course Design Framework and an AI Faculty Engagement Framework—to create scalable, values-driven pathways for pedagogical transformation. Participants will explore how equity-centered strategy design, targeted faculty development, and culturally responsive AI integration can spark meaningful institutional change.Keywords: #facultydevelopment #humancenteredAI #equitableintegration
Speakers
avatar for Jennifer Rider

Jennifer Rider

Fort Lewis College
MC

Marnie Clay

Fort Lewis College
Friday June 12, 2026 10:20am - 10:50am EDT
Lafayette 3

11:00am EDT

AI and the Job Search: Infusing Career Technology into Curriculum to Support Student Professional Development
Friday June 12, 2026 11:00am - 11:30am EDT
Incorporating AI into career readiness for college students can help them build the essential skills needed to thrive in a rapidly evolving workforce. AI tools can support students in areas such as résumé building, interview preparation, and professional communication by offering personalized feedback and real time suggestions. In the classroom, AI can simulate the job search process, giving students hands-on experience with tools commonly used by recruiters to evaluate job applications. By integrating AI literacy into career readiness programming, colleges can ensure students are not just job ready, but future ready.
Speakers
avatar for Emily Flositz

Emily Flositz

Career Development Training Specialist, University of Central Florida
Experienced higher education professional with over 15 years in leadership and program management roles. Recognized for excellence in supervision, training, and developing innovative career readiness initiatives for diverse student populations.
avatar for Iryna Malendevych

Iryna Malendevych

University of Central Florida

Friday June 12, 2026 11:00am - 11:30am EDT
Lafayette 3

1:00pm EDT

From Vibe to Variable: Driving Rapid Prototyping and Sophisticated Tool Development in the AI Studio
Friday June 12, 2026 1:00pm - 1:30pm EDT
This session explores how an integrated AI Studio serves as a high-velocity engine to drive the prototyping of sophisticated digital tools, allowing academic leaders to move from conceptual “vibes” to functional architectures in record time. While AI accelerates early generation, the session emphasizes that Vibe Coding still requires technical rigor and a full-stack mindset. Attendees will see how natural language intent, rapid iteration, and disciplined design can advance curriculum innovation, competency mapping, assessment generation, Competency-Based Education, and Prior Learning Assessment, shortening the path from strategic idea to digital reality.
Speakers
avatar for Rebecca McNulty

Rebecca McNulty

Instructional Designer, Center for Distributed Learning

Friday June 12, 2026 1:00pm - 1:30pm EDT
Lafayette 3

1:40pm EDT

The Online Educator's AI Playbook
Friday June 12, 2026 1:40pm - 2:10pm EDT
Ready to put AI to work in your online courses, without the guesswork? This session covers practical strategies for integrating generative AI across four key areas: developing AI policies that actually work, designing assessments that account for AI use, creating engaging online discussions that promote critical thinking, and streamlining the creation of instructional materials. You'll see real examples from two different courses and walk away with concrete techniques you can implement immediately. Whether you're just AI-curious or ready to transform your course design, no tech expertise required. Just bring your questions!
Speakers
avatar for Wilson Rojas

Wilson Rojas

Assistant Director, Emerging & Innovative Technologies, University of Northern Iowa
Friday June 12, 2026 1:40pm - 2:10pm EDT
Lafayette 3

2:20pm EDT

Good Answers, Bad Alignment? Evaluating Fidelity of GenAI Output
Friday June 12, 2026 2:20pm - 2:50pm EDT
As generative AI (GenAI) tools move from experimentation to everyday use, higher education lacks practical methods for testing whether prompts perform reliably across consistent examples. This session presents a replicable prompt evaluation process using controlled multi-case testing, human rubric-based review, and revision cycles. Participants will examine ways to evaluate a GenAI prompt across varied scenarios, identify failure indicators, and iteratively refine performance by prioritizing human expertise. Together, these strategies build a practical model for evaluating GenAI integration into instructional and institutional workflows. #AI-evaluation #human-in-the-loop #prompt-fidelity 
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 Rebecca McNulty

Rebecca McNulty

Instructional Designer, Center for Distributed Learning

Friday June 12, 2026 2:20pm - 2:50pm EDT
Lafayette 3

3:00pm EDT

From Pedagogical Intent to Structured Data: An AI-Assisted Workflow for Course Revision and Redesign
Friday June 12, 2026 3:00pm - 3:30pm EDT
Large language models are able to identify pedagogical intent in course packages, such as Common Cartridge files, and use that intent to generate structured data that supports systematic course revision and redesign. This session demonstrates an AI-assisted workflow to import existing courses, analyze content, determine instructional function, and transform materials into new templates and adjusted session lengths before exporting revised courses back into a learning management system. By focusing on what instructional elements are designed to accomplish, this approach enables scalable redesign, visual standardization, and enhancements that support Universal Design for Learning, while preserving human instructional judgment.#AI-assisted-workflows #Course-revision-and-redesign #Instructional-design
Speakers
avatar for Rebecca McNulty

Rebecca McNulty

Instructional Designer, Center for Distributed Learning

Friday June 12, 2026 3:00pm - 3:30pm EDT
Lafayette 3

3:40pm EDT

Repeatable Results: Using AI to Create Consistent, High-Quality Teaching Practices
Friday June 12, 2026 3:40pm - 4:10pm EDT
As educators adopt AI tools, consistency and reliability are as important as innovation. This presentation focuses on how AI can be used to produce repeatable, dependable results across core instructional tasks, including content creation, student communication, feedback, grading support, and learning analytics. Through real classroom workflows, participants will see how structured prompts, clear guardrails, and intentional human oversight allow AI to enhance efficiency while preserving pedagogical quality. Attendees will leave with strategies for making AI use predictable, transparent, and sustainable across courses and terms.
Speakers
avatar for Brian Holbert

Brian Holbert

Professor, St Johns River State College
I am a computer Science professor who has been working with the LLMs that have come out since 2021 to leverage them as tools for education. I have moved to the next level to offer these tools to other educators through our platform at gradassist.ai
Friday June 12, 2026 3:40pm - 4:10pm EDT
Lafayette 3

4:20pm EDT

From AI Anxiety to Instructional Control: Designing Custom AI Teaching Tools
Friday June 12, 2026 4:20pm - 4:50pm EDT
As generative AI becomes embedded in higher education, many instructors struggle to prevent AI tools from replacing student learning. This session introduces a practical, instructor-controlled approach to designing custom AI teaching tools that prioritize guidance, feedback, and explanation instead of content generation. Participants will learn a step-by-step framework for building task-specific custom AI tools and explore adaptable examples that can be implemented across disciplines and course formats. Attendees will leave with concrete strategies they can apply immediately in their own teaching. (custom AI tools, instructor-designed AI tools, AI pedagogy)
Speakers
HW

Hua Wang

Cornell University
JW

Junhua Wang

University of Minnesota Duluth
Friday June 12, 2026 4:20pm - 4:50pm EDT
Lafayette 3
 
Saturday, June 13
 

9:00am EDT

Ctrl + Alt + Delete: Rebooting Pedagogy and Practice for Teaching with AI
Saturday June 13, 2026 9:00am - 9:30am EDT
Traditional pedagogy isn’t crashing—it’s undergoing a significant re-calibration. As AI reshapes the classroom, we have a unique opportunity to pause and choose what we carry forward. It’s time to CTRL the narrative, explore ALTernative pathways for accessibility, and Delete legacy practices that no longer serve our students. This 30-minute session challenges participants to move beyond basic tools to address "not-easily-answered" questions about student engagement and course design. Through the lens of Universal Design for Learning (UDL), we will explore how to modernize our teaching while keeping human-centered learning at the core.---
Speakers
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Annette Jones

Florida State University - Office of Digital Learning & Academic Technology
avatar for Christopher Riley

Christopher Riley

Instructional Technologist, Florida State University
RF

Robert Fuselier

Florida State University - Office of Digital Learning & Academic Technology
LM

Liying Miao

Florida State University - Office of Digital Learning & Academic Technology

Saturday June 13, 2026 9:00am - 9:30am EDT
Lafayette 3

9:40am EDT

How Faculty Are Using Generative AI: An Analysis of Over 300 "GenAI Plans" for Course Enhancement
Saturday June 13, 2026 9:40am - 10:10am EDT
AI has transformed teaching and learning, but how are faculty actually using it to enhance their courses? To address this question, we conducted a qualitative analysis of more than 300 generative AI course enhancement plans submitted by faculty participating in USF’s self-paced workshop, Course Enhancement with GenAI.  This analysis yielded over 600 coded AI use cases, consolidated into 18 emergent categories. In this presentation, we rank and examine these categories, highlight the most common strategies, and share actionable insights grounded in faculty practice. Join us to see how USF faculty are putting AI into action. The results may surprise you.
Speakers
avatar for Lindsey Mercer

Lindsey Mercer

Director: USF Digital Learning Training & Support, University of South Florida
Over 20 years experience designing, developing, and supporting fully online courses for the University of South Florida. Spearheading the creation of skills-based training solutions for thousands of USF faculty including fully online workshops, lab-based workshops, and just-in-time... Read More →
Saturday June 13, 2026 9:40am - 10:10am EDT
Lafayette 3

10:20am EDT

If We Build It, WILL they come? Enhancing Faculty Engagement with Library AI Services
Saturday June 13, 2026 10:20am - 10:50am EDT
Creighton University Libraries are expanding services to support the institution’s growing focus on artificial intelligence. Initiatives include piloting library‑specific AI tools, integrating AI literacy into instruction, offering skill‑building workshops, and developing an emerging technologies lab for introductory AI experimentation.Despite these efforts, faculty engagement has varied. Following a brief overview of our work, this session will shift to a collaborative discussion where participants can share their experiences, challenges, and strategies from their own AI initiatives, helping identify common needs and opportunities for cross‑disciplinary support.
Speakers
avatar for Becky Wymer

Becky Wymer

Head Librarian - Systems and Emerging Technologies, Creighton University Libraries
Saturday June 13, 2026 10:20am - 10:50am EDT
Lafayette 3
 


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