AI Training 101

AI Foundations for Educators

Empower your teaching with foundational AI knowledge. In this course, educators will gain a clear understanding of what AI is ... Show more
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AI in Education Foundations

This crucial first course is designed to equip educators with a comprehensive framework for effectively utilizing and interacting with Artificial Intelligence (AI) tools in their teaching practices. It provides practical, actionable steps and fosters a mindset and skillset for confident and creative AI interaction.

What AI Is and Isn’t

Lay the essential foundation by exploring the basic concepts of AI, its historical development, and its current state. This includes defining key terms such as Artificial Intelligence (AI) as the broad field of creating machines that perform human-like tasks, Machine Learning (ML) as a subset training algorithms to recognize patterns, Deep Learning using neural networks for complex patterns, Natural Language Processing (NLP) for human language interaction, and Neural Networks modeled loosely after the human brain.

Crucially, this section will also tackle common myths and misconceptions about AI. Participants will learn that AI is not a sentient, all-knowing being, nor is it conscious or self-aware; it is an advanced tool for specific tasks based on algorithms and data. AI is unlikely to replace all human jobs but rather augment human capabilities and create new roles. Furthermore, AI systems do not understand context like humans do and are not infallible, as they can make errors, especially if trained on biased or incomplete data. Understanding these capabilities and limitations is vital for effective AI integration in education. The resurgence of AI since the 2000s has been driven by advancements in machine learning, data growth, and computational power, leading to the AI technologies we interact with today.

The AI Mindset / 4 W’s Framework

This course encourages critical reflection and discernment regarding AI use through the “4 W’s” framework: What are you Gaining, What are you Losing, What are you NOT Practicing, and What are you Accessing?.

  • What are you Gaining? Identify tangible benefits like faster lesson planning, personalized learning, and insightful data analysis.
  • What are you Losing? Recognize potential risks such as diminished creativity in teaching, reduced critical thinking in students, and a decrease in human connection.
  • What are you NOT Practicing? Understand which skills might become underdeveloped due to AI use, such as providing personalized feedback or designing open-ended assessments.
  • What are you Accessing? Distinguish between truly gaining new skills versus merely accessing them through AI as a shortcut.

This framework ensures that AI enhances, rather than detracts from, human interaction and judgment in education.

Understanding and Interacting with AI (Prompt Engineering)

This is the central skill of the course, teaching how to communicate effectively with AI through clear, specific, and contextual prompts. A “prompt” is simply the input or instruction you give to the AI, and the quality of the output depends heavily on how well it is crafted.

The course introduces the S.P.A.R.K. framework (Simplicity, Precision, Adaptability, Reinforcement, Knowledge) as a versatile and structured approach to AI interaction:

  • Simplicity: Focuses on breaking down complex tasks into simpler, manageable components to enhance AI effectiveness and improve accuracy.
  • Precision: Emphasizes the importance of clear and specific instructions, ensuring the AI tailors its response directly to your needs and goals.
  • Adaptability: Teaches you to adjust your approach based on AI feedback and performance, iteratively refining prompts to improve results, especially given that AI can sometimes produce “hallucinations” or suboptimal outputs.
  • Reinforcement: Involves learning from each AI interaction and using that knowledge to improve future engagements, ensuring continuous refinement and more effective outputs over time.
  • Knowledge: Stresses the importance of continuously updating your AI literacy, understanding its capabilities and limitations to craft prompts that leverage its strengths effectively.

The S.P.A.R.K. framework simplifies prompt engineering, making AI tools more effective and accessible for educators without requiring extensive technical knowledge. Practical exercises, reflection questions, and key takeaways are integrated to ensure the framework is actionable and applicable in real-world educational settings.

Course materials

Important Notice: Navigating Artificial Intelligence in Education

As Artificial Intelligence (AI) continues to rapidly transform various sectors, its integration into educational environments is becoming increasingly significant. This period of generational change necessitates equipping all faculty and staff with the tools and understanding needed to provide exceptional teaching and learning. Our objective is to promote AI awareness, interest, and understanding among educators.

Key Considerations for Educators:

  1. Understanding AI and Its Capabilities: It is crucial to establish a clear understanding of what AI truly is—and what it isn't—including basic concepts, historical development, and common myths. AI offers a wide range of tools for educators, from generating lesson plans and teaching materials to providing personalized learning support, assisting with assessments and feedback, and streamlining administrative tasks.

  2. Developing an "AI Mindset" (The 4 W's Framework): Critical reflection on AI use is encouraged through the "4 W's" framework: "What are you Gaining, What are you Losing, What are you NOT Practicing, and What are you Accessing?". This framework helps educators use AI with discernment, ensuring it enhances, rather than detracts from, human interaction and judgment in education.

  3. Mastering Prompt Engineering (S.P.A.R.K. Framework): Effective communication with AI is a central skill achieved through clear, specific, and contextual prompts. The S.P.A.R.K. framework provides a structured approach, emphasizing:

    • Simplicity: Breaking complex tasks into simpler components.
    • Precision: Giving clear and specific instructions to tailor responses.
    • Adaptability: Adjusting your approach based on AI feedback and performance (especially when AI produces "hallucinations" or suboptimal results).
    • Reinforcement: Learning from each interaction to improve future ones.
    • Knowledge: Continuously updating your AI literacy and understanding its capabilities and limitations.
  4. Ethical Considerations and Responsible Use: Educators must exercise caution and structure AI prompts carefully to ensure unbiased, critical-thinking-based discussions, as AI mirrors the wording provided. Key ethical principles include beneficence, non-maleficence, autonomy, justice, and explicability. Challenges such as data privacy concerns, algorithmic bias, and potential academic integrity issues must be addressed. Schools should develop clear AI usage policies, including guidelines for disclosing AI use, recommended tools, teacher education, and age-appropriate differentiation.

  5. Age-Appropriate AI Integration: AI use should be adjusted based on students' developmental stages:

    • Elementary School (K-5): AI primarily as an observational tool, often within educational courseware, with no AI use for content generation or analysis.
    • Middle School (6-8): Limited AI use for research, organization, and guided learning, still within educational courseware or with careful discernment for direct tools.
    • High School (9-12): Expanded AI use for research, writing improvement, and problem-solving, with careful monitoring and requiring more user knowledge for direct tools like ChatGPT or Claude.
    • College and Beyond: AI as a strategic tool for productivity and complex problem-solving, as an enhancement tool rather than a crutch.

By focusing on these areas, educators can effectively integrate AI into their practices, enhancing both teaching methods and student learning experiences responsibly and ethically.

AiFoundations
Course details
Duration 4 Lectures
Lectures 5
Video 4 hours
Level Beginner
Basic info

Learning Outcomes

Participants will:

  • Increase awareness, interest, and understanding of AI.
  • Understand how AI tools like ChatGPT function and their applications in education.
  • Learn how to write effective AI prompts using the S.P.A.R.K. framework, which emphasizes Simplicity, Precision, Adaptability, Reinforcement, and Knowledge.
  • Explore AI’s practical role in lesson planning, personalized learning, assessment, feedback, and administrative tasks.
  • Recognize ethical implications, including bias and data privacy, and develop discernment in AI use.

What’s Included

  • Demonstrations of AI tools and practical applications.
  • Hands-on prompting activities.
  • Sample lesson plans, assessment templates, and various prompt examples.
  • Curated resource lists for ongoing learning and AI literacy.
Intended audience

Educators, faculty, and staff working in all educational environments.

This course is also designed for anyone interested in effectively integrating Artificial Intelligence (AI) into teaching and learning practices.