An AI policy should be usable by faculty and understandable to students. It should guide behavior without becoming so broad that no one can apply it in real academic situations.
The problem this resource solves
Many institutions need a starting structure for AI policy but must adapt it to local rules, disciplines, and assessment cultures.
Who should use it
- Faculty members and academic leaders.
- Research scholars and postgraduate learners.
- Institutions planning practical AI capability.
Core framework
Use the issue as a practical academic workflow: clarify purpose, choose responsible support, verify outputs, document use, and improve the human-led process.
- Purpose and scope.
- Allowed, guided, restricted, and prohibited use.
- Disclosure expectations.
- Privacy and data protection.
- Assessment and academic integrity.
- Governance, review, and revision.
Practical workflow
- Define the academic task and learning or research objective.
- Decide where AI can support without replacing core thinking.
- Use structured prompts or templates.
- Verify outputs against reliable sources and institutional expectations.
- Document AI use and refine the workflow after review.
Examples and applications
- A faculty member converts the resource into a classroom activity.
- A research scholar uses the checklist before drafting or submitting work.
- An institution adapts the framework for an FDP or policy discussion.
Responsible-use boundaries
AI-supported work should remain transparent, verifiable, privacy-aware, and aligned with academic integrity. The user remains responsible for claims, decisions, citations, and final submitted work.
Checklist
- Purpose is clear.
- Human judgment is visible.
- Sources are verified.
- Sensitive data is protected.
- Disclosure expectations are followed.
Related pathways
- Generative AI in Education hub
- AI for Research hub
- Responsible AI in Education hub
- Speaking and workshops
- Downloads and tools
- Classroom policy template
Invite or adapt this topic
This resource can be adapted into a keynote, invited lecture, FDP, research scholar workshop, classroom note, or institutional planning session. For a tailored session, share the audience profile, expected duration, and the practical outcomes required.