Use this note as a starting point for academic discussion, course planning, faculty development, or institutional review. Adapt the examples and checklists to the discipline, learner profile, assessment method, and local policy context.
A one-day FDP works best when organizers define the audience, outcomes, session flow, hands-on activities, and post-session action plan in advance.
Why this needs academic attention
Many FDPs are planned around topic titles rather than participant outcomes, which reduces value for faculty.
Readers and teaching contexts
- Faculty members revising courses, assignments, and feedback practices.
- Research scholars and postgraduate learners who need structure without losing ownership of the work.
- Institutions planning faculty development, student guidance, policy, or AI readiness activities.
Framework for academic use
Begin with the academic task, not the tool. The useful questions are what the learner or researcher must understand, what evidence will show that understanding, and where human review is non-negotiable.
- Define participant profile and prior exposure.
- Choose three or four session outcomes.
- Include demonstrations and hands-on practice.
- Add assessment and policy discussion.
- End with course-level action planning.
Classroom, research, or department use
- Name the academic task: teaching preparation, assessment design, literature review, writing support, policy drafting, or institutional planning.
- Decide which parts can be assisted by AI and which parts require faculty, supervisor, examiner, or committee judgment.
- Check outputs against readings, source documents, assignment goals, and institutional policy.
- Record meaningful AI assistance when it changes the substance, structure, or language of academic work.
- Review whether the final work still shows reading, reasoning, evidence, and disciplinary understanding.
Examples from academic work
- A faculty member uses the page to revise an assignment brief so students must show process evidence, source checking, and reflection.
- A research scholar uses the checklist before converting AI-assisted notes into a literature review matrix.
- An academic committee adapts the guidance for an FDP discussion or a department-level policy note.
Limits, verification, and responsibility
AI-supported academic work must remain transparent, verifiable, privacy-aware, and guided by human judgment. Generated text, citations, interpretations, policy wording, and assessment decisions should not be treated as final without review.
Questions for review
- The academic purpose is explicit.
- The human decision points are visible.
- Claims, sources, and references have been checked.
- Privacy and institutional policy boundaries are respected.
- The final use improves learning quality, research discipline, or institutional decision-making.
Related reading
- Generative AI in Education hub
- AI for Research hub
- Responsible AI in Education hub
- Speaking and workshops
- Downloads and tools
- AI workshops for colleges
Academic-session use
For an invited session, this material can be narrowed into a keynote, FDP activity, research-scholar clinic, classroom note, or institutional policy discussion. A useful invitation should mention the audience, duration, format, and the academic outcome expected from the session.