AI for Teachers

AIG has partnered with a number of campus units to offer training in applied AI and resources for AI literacy.

A playful and humanistic promotional image for the Mississippi AI Institute, rendered in watercolor style. The setting is a vibrant workshop with a diverse group of participants, including men and women of different ages and ethnicities. They are seated around tables adorned with colorful decorations, laptops open, engaging actively with each other. A presenter at the front gestures towards a whimsical, watercolor-style AI concept on a large screen.

AI Training & Resources

Find all of our AI training and resources below.

The Mississippi AI Institute for Teachers was created by the Department of Writing and Rhetoric, with seed funding from the Institute of Data Science. It has since partnered with the Center for Excellence in Teaching and Learning and the Academic Innovations Group to offer training for faculty in applied AI. 

Mississippi AI Institute

 

AI literacy is a segment of existing media literacy. In the field of applied AI, AI literacy refers to using generative tools, like ChatGPT, and understanding their affordances and limitations. Critical AI literacy explores areas related to the social, economic, environmental, and ethical challenges posed by this emerging technology.

Helpful Resources: 

Microsoft Copilot

All UM faculty, staff, and students have access to the enterprise versions of Microsoft Copilott. Copilot is Microsoft’s AI-powered chat interface. It uses a version of OpenAI’s GPT-4. All chats are protected under Microsoft’s data protection agreement. Even so, we do not advise uploading sensitive data, or any data that contains FERPA or HIPPA-related material.

  • To access Copilot, Simply go to Microsoft Copilott on any web browser and enter your UM credentials. You should be logged into UM’s enterprise version and see a checkmark in the upper right-hand corner that indicates their chat is protected.

Blackboard’s AI Design Assistant

Blackboard Ultra courses have access to the AI Design Assistant for instructional design. You can create course elements with the AI Design Assistant, including rubrics, discussion posts, assignments, and course modules, and upload your syllabus to have the AI generate materials related to your teaching. For more information about Blackboard’s AI Design Assistant, please contact FTDC.

The UM library developed an excellent series of AI resources for faculty to use. 

Library Faculty AI Resources  

  • Keep Up to Date About AI

    You can find more AI news and resources on Marc Watkins’ blog.

    AI News

A Framework for AI in Education

Find our resources for navigating AI in education below.

Normalize openly labeling AI-generated content, for educators, students, and administrators. Open disclosure builds mutual trust and models ethical behavior.

Resources:

  • Why We Should Normalize Open Disclosure of AI Use from the Chronicle of Higher Education
  • A template: “AI Usage Disclosure: This document was created with assistance from AI tools. The content has been reviewed and edited by a human. For more information on the extent and nature of AI usage, please contact the author.”
  • Or with more specifics: “AI Usage Disclosure: This document [include title] was created with assistance from [specify the AI tool]. The content can be viewed here [add link] and has been reviewed and edited by [author’s full name]. For m

Give students mechanisms to make their learning transparent if AI is used. Students can evaluate how AI contributed to or hindered their learning using reflection and other questions designed for critical thinking. Doing so helps us understand if they're actually learning while using AI or just using it as a time-saving shortcut.

Resources:

Be prepared for students who challenge ethical frameworks and explore restorative practices for academic misconduct cases involving AI, focusing on repairing trust rather than just punishment. Resources: