A practical session on AI disclosure, assessment design, originality, and academic integrity.
Session focus
Academic integrity in the AI era, student guidance, disclosure, assessment redesign, and classroom policy.
Ideal audience
This session can be adapted for faculty members, research scholars, academic leaders, business schools, universities, conference audiences, and institutional teams depending on the event objective.
Expected outcomes
Participants should leave with clearer AI vocabulary, practical examples, responsible-use principles, and a structured view of how to apply the ideas in teaching, research, assessment, or institutional work.
Customization
The session can be delivered as a keynote, invited lecture, FDP, workshop, panel input, or institutional planning discussion. Examples, depth, and activities can be adjusted for beginner, intermediate, or leadership audiences.
Organizer value
The session is designed to give event organizers a credible academic theme, practical participant takeaways, and a clear bridge between emerging AI concepts and the real decisions facing classrooms, research teams, and institutions.
Typical structure
- Opening context: why the topic matters now for education, research, institutions, and knowledge work.
- Conceptual clarity: key terms, common misconceptions, risks, and practical examples.
- Application layer: classroom, research, faculty, institutional, or leadership workflows depending on the audience.
- Responsible-use layer: verification, disclosure, privacy, accountability, academic integrity, and governance.
- Action planning: what participants or institutions can try next without overclaiming or adopting blindly.
Good fit for
- Keynotes, invited lectures, FDPs, conference sessions, research seminars, panel discussions, and institutional programs.
- Universities, business schools, departments, research forums, faculty development cells, and education-focused events.
- Audiences that need academic clarity, practical examples, and responsible adoption guidance rather than tool promotion.
Information helpful for planning
- Event theme, participant profile, expected session length, and whether the format is keynote, invited lecture, workshop, FDP, or panel.
- Current AI maturity of the audience, institutional priorities, and the practical outcomes organizers want participants to achieve.
- Delivery mode, date range, city or timezone, certificate or FDP requirements, and any preferred examples or case contexts.