Teachers Using AI

Nearly a third of K–12 teachers say they used the technology at least weekly last school year. Sally Hubbard, a sixth-grade math-and-science teacher in Sacramento, California, told me that AI saves her an average of five to 10 hours each week by helping her create assignments and supplement curricula. “If I spend all of that time creating, grading, researching,” she said, “then I don’t have as much energy to show up in person and make connections with kids.” Lila Shroff writing in The Atlantic

Rewriting Prompts Doesn't Always Work

MIT study: Surprisingly, rewriting prompts using generative AI led to worse performance. The team found that the automatic rewrites often added extra details or changed the meaning of what users were trying to say, leading the AI to produce the wrong kind of image. It shows how AI systems can break down when designers make assumptions about how people will use them. -MIT

17 Webinars this week about AI, Journalism & Media

Tue, Aug 12 - Translating Clinical Data into Compelling Visuals: A Guide to Graphical Abstract

What: We will take you through designing visual abstracts for clinical research. Learn how to create visuals that not only summarize your study but also captivate journal editors and readers.

Who: Valeria Panissa Health Science, Pharmacovigilant Analyst.

When: 9 am, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Editage 

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Tue, Aug 12 - Finding Your Voice in Longterm Storytelling

What: A behind the scenes look at "Trembling Earth" — a three-year project focused on protecting Georgia’s Okefenokee Swamp.

Who: David Walter Banks, photographer and environmental advocacy artist.

When: 11 am, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Society of Environmental Journalists

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Tue, Aug 12 - Beyond Content: Designing AI for Coherence, Growth, and Shared Meaning

What: This session offers a grounded approach to integrating AI into real learning workflows—not as a shortcut, but as a tool for reflection, decision-making, and team growth. Whether you’re just getting started or trying to deepen your practice, you’ll leave with fresh ways to use AI for designing better prompts, structuring learning conversations, and supporting real-world outcomes.

Who: Dox Brown, Educe LLC.

When: 12 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: OpenSesame

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Tue, Aug 12 - Buzzwords to Blueprints: What AI on Campus Actually Looks Like

What: A dynamic conversation on how universities are moving from hype to hands-on innovation. Our panel will explore specific and creative ways institutions are encouraging students to use AI responsibly and effectively—whether through course design, new creative tools, partnerships with tech companies, or campus-wide initiatives. The goal of this webinar is for attendees to walk away with fresh examples, practical takeaways, and a better understanding of how forward-thinking colleges are turning AI from theory into action.

Who: Asim Ali Ph.D, Executive Director of the Biggio Center for the Enhancement of Teaching and Learning at Auburn University, California State University Monterrey Bay CIO; Tara Hughes, Adobe Senior Product Marketing Manager; Dhruva Chandrasekhar; Senior Writer for the Chronicle of Higher Education Rick Seltzer.

When: 1:30 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Whiteboard Advisors

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Tue, Aug 12 - Ways to make your next Reel really take off

What: We’ll explore proven strategies to help your Reels gain traction, from crafting scroll-stopping hooks and choosing the right audio, to timing, tagging, and maximizing engagement after you post. Whether you’re just getting started or looking to take your short-form video game to the next level, this session will leave you with fresh ideas and actionable tips to boost your reach and results.

Who: David Arkin, Founder, David Arkin Consulting.

When: 2 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Local Media Association

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Tue, Aug 12 - Introduction to Proposal Writing

What: This indispensable class will give you a step-by-step guide to creating a grant proposal to a foundation. It will include: The basic elements of a grant proposal, including the need statement, project description, and evaluation plan. A model outline of the essential components of any grant proposal  The "do's" and "don'ts" of writing, planning and submitting a proposal. The methods for building a relationship with a potential funder, from initial outreach to follow-up and reporting.

Who: Ivonne Simms, Educational Programming Manager, Candid.

When: 2 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Candid

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Tue, Aug 12 - AI Innovator Collaborative: Let’s Write It: Workshop To Write AI Use Disclosures

What: What Trusting News is learning about what news consumers think about AI use in journalism and draft your own disclosure language around AI use. Whether you’re thinking about labeling AI-generated visuals, explaining how AI helps with summarizing and translating stories or disclosing tools used in story development, we’ll help you do it clearly, responsibly and in a way your audience understands.

Who: Trusting News’ Lynn Walsh.

When: 3 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Online News Association

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Wed, Aug 13 -  The Big Why: The case for strengthening climate and environmental journalism in Africa

What: This webinar will delve into the fundamental reasons why robust and impactful climate and environmental journalism is an indispensable pillar of an informed society and a sustainable future. The discussion will explore the state of climate and environmental journalism in Africa, identify the needs and gaps, and opportunities for multistakeholder collaboration.

Who:  Marystella Simiyu, Africa Senior Legal Officer, IPI; Tulani Ngwenya, Associate Journalist, Oxpeckers Investigative Environmental Journalism;  Lydia Kembabazi, Africa Program Manager, IPI;  Ibrahima Yakubu, Founder of the African Climate Reporters; Farah Wael, Advocacy and Engagement Director, Women in News

When: 5 am, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: International Press Institute

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Wed, Aug 13 - Cloud Attack and Defend: Emerging Threats

What: Explore the evolving landscape of cyber threats targeting Cloud and AI environments. We’ll share the latest findings on real-world threats. Discover the tactics, techniques, and procedures used by adversaries, and gain actionable strategies to fortify your defenses.

Who: Chris Hosking, SentinelOne.

When: 8 am, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: SentinelOne

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Wed, Aug 13 - Integrating AI with the Kirkpatrick Four Levels: Revolutionizing Evaluation

What: We will explore the fusion of AI and the Kirkpatrick Model to enhance training evaluations. Discover how AI can refine program planning, generate innovative brainstorming techniques, and elevate data analysis and presentation, all while maintaining essential human oversight.

Who: Vanessa Milara Alzate, Owner and CEO of Kirkpatrick Partners and Founder of Anchored Training; Myra Roldan, founder and CEO of UnDesto AI.

When: 12 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: OpenSesame

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Wed, Aug 13 - AI-Powered Search: New Frontiers in Marketing with Google

What: We’ll reveal the future of search and how AI is transforming the way people discover and engage with content. Explore cutting-edge innovations like AI Overviews, Lens, and Circle to Search—and uncover what they mean for shifting consumer behavior. Walk away with actionable insights to evolve your marketing strategy and stay ahead in this new era of search.

Who: Cecilia Wong Global Product Lead, Head of Search Creatives & Formats Google.

When: 1 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Association of National Advertisers (ANA)

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Wed, Aug 13 - The “Big Beautiful Bill”: What it means for taxes

What: We will inform journalists on the biggest tax cuts and tax policy changes that are part of the new law. We’ll dive into how these changes could impact readers and viewers, look at what these provisions mean for the federal deficit, and also explore which groups of people can expect to see the biggest benefits from the law and who might not. Whether you’re new to writing about taxes or have dipped your toe into writing about them before, our policy experts will be ready to answer your burning questions on how the new law stands to impact Americans’ pocketbooks and more.

Who: Shai Akabas, Vice President, Economic Policy·Bipartisan Policy Center; Andrew Lautz Director, Tax Policy·Bipartisan Policy Center.

When: 1 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsors: Bipartisan Policy Center & The Journalism Center at the National Press Club

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Wed, Aug 13 – Open Source Threat Intelligence: Still a Reliable Tool Amidst the AI and Machine Learning Hype

What: In this presentation, we will highlight while automating threat intelligence is great, the human factor in gathering timely and critical information from open sources is equally important. Companies cannot simply rely solely on AI algorithms despite the hype.

Who: Ralph Villanueva, IT Security & Compliance Analyst.

When: 5 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: TechTarget

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Thu, Aug 14 - Beyond Basic AI – How Structured Content Unlocks Next-Level Intelligence

What: You’ll discover how structured content can power your technology ecosystem and enable deeper, more actionable insights from your proprietary materials. From fueling intelligent chatbots to supporting semantic search across your content ecosystem, this webinar will show you how to move beyond basic AI and into a new era of intelligent learning solutions.

Who: Chris Kocher, senior solutions architect at MadCap.

When: 11 am, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: MadCap Software

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Thu, Aug 14 - How to Master Media Relations: Targeting, Tailoring, Timing

What: We'll explore proven strategies for precision targeting and crafting personalized pitches that resonate with journalists and build stronger relationships over time.  You’ll also learn how to ensure your media lists are accurate and up to date, craft outreach that gets responses, and streamline your workflow without sacrificing quality. Whether you’re looking to improve your pitch performance or build long-term media connections, this webinar will help you level up your approach.

Who: Karen Swim, APR, is the Founder of Words For Hire, a B2B, Technology, and Healthcare PR and Marketing agency and the President of Solo PR Pro.

When: 12:30 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Public Relations Today

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Fri, Aug 15 - The Freelance Life: What to know and how to grow

What: Whether you're just stepping into the freelance world or looking to grow your independent journalism business, this half-day virtual conference is designed to equip you with practical tools, insider knowledge, and expert guidance. Participants will hear from seasoned freelancers, editors, and an attorney about today’s freelance landscape and learn how to build their businesses, successfully pitch stories, and thrive as an independent journalist in an evolving industry. With tailored tracks for both new and experienced freelancers, this conference is your chance to sharpen your strategy, expand your network, and get inspired.

Who: Kaitlyn Arford, freelance journalist; Allison Prang, NPCJI, freelance journalist; Mythili Sampathkumar, freelance journalist; Ellen Lee, Wirecutter; Cari Shan, freelance journalist; Katie Hawkins-Gaar, freelancer writer/consultant; Allison Prang, NPCJI, freelance journalist; Cari Shane, freelance journalist; Lisa Armstrong; UC Berkeley; Danny Freedman, freelance journalist; Beth Francesco, moderator; Lynn Oberlander, Ballard Spahr; Anjuman Ali, The Washington Post; Melanie Eversley, Black News & Views; Natalie Shutler, New York Magazine; Alexandra Sifferlin, The New York Times.

When: 12 pm – 4:15 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: $25 for National Press Club members and students, $35/public

Sponsor: National Press Club

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Fri, Aug 15 - Crafting Narrative Investigations with Power and Precision 

What: A hands-on workshop exploring the art and craft of narrative investigations — a storytelling approach that uses real people as the engine of deep, fact-based journalism. Narrative investigations rely on scenes, dialogue, character, and emotional stakes to bring truth to life — merging the immersive power of fiction with the rigor of investigative reporting.​​​​​

Who: Investigative journalist Andrea Ball.

When: 12 pm, Eastern  

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Sunlight Research Center

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Good Listening

Good listening takes practice; it’s actually a discipline. It doesn’t come easily or naturally. Listening means more than just hearing what a person says. A counselor I know expressed the difference like this: “hearing captures the words a person speaks; listening captures the meaning and the feeling beneath those words.” Listening is the mental step by which we become more aware of the other person than we are of ourselves. The best definition of listening I ever came across is that given by Norman H. Wright, who said, “Listening is not thinking about what you are going to say when the other person has stopped talking.’

A Good Prompt Should Include

A good AI prompt should include: 

  • Sample content

  • Specific guidance on tone, length, structure, word count, etc.

An example:    

Write a 1,000-word article on estate planning, targeting mid-aged professionals in the southeast US. The tone should be informative but approachable. Use plain language and a clear structure so it’s easily scannable. Include actionable tips and examples. Our firm focuses on public service professionals, such as teachers and firefighters, so please use language, scenarios, and tips that are relevant to this audience. 

Keep providing feedback until the output meets your requirements.

More at JD Supra 

AI Definitions: Artificial Intelligence

Artificial Intelligence (AI) – AI typically refers to computers that imitate the human thinking process, so they that are able to make some decisions on their own without the need of human intervention. The defining feature of artificial intelligence is that the behavior is learned from data rather from being explicitly programmed. AI can effectively mimic and mix established patterns in creative ways. However, it does not perform as well at breaking expectations and conventional forms to create entirely new things.   

More AI definitions here

Your self-evaluations

Your self-evaluations are important because they influence most areas of your behavior, defining the limits of what you will attempt. You avoid an activity if your self-concept predicts you will perform so badly as to humiliate yourself. For instance, if your self-concept includes the belief that you would be a poor ice skater, you might never try it, and will indeed remain a poor ice skater. Often people excuse themselves with “That’s just the way I am.” By using this excuse, they deny themselves opportunities for personal growth.

Sharon and Gordon Bower, Asserting Yourself

22 Recent Articles about Using AI

How to Use AI for Website Content and Still Appear Human - JD Supra

Study: Generative AI results depend on user prompts as much as models – MIT

Google’s NotebookLM can now make narrated slideshows with AI – The Verge

I'm a college writing professor. How I think students should use AI this fall – Mashable

Startup Writer builds corporate AI agent that doesn’t go off-script - Semafor

Seriously, Why Do Some AI Chatbot Subscriptions Cost More Than $200? – Wired  

How neurodivergent people are using AI tools – Reuters  

We asked 2,000 Substack publishers how they’re using and thinking about AI. Here’s what we found. - Substack

YouTube Shorts is adding an image-to-video AI tool, new AI effects – TechCrunch

Do people click on links in Google AI summaries? - Pew Research Center

The AI Replaces Services Myth – Mert Deveci

Try these hidden ‘NOPE’ buttons to stop AI content How to turn off AI in Google – Washington Post

AI Search Is Growing More Quickly Than Expected – Wall Street Journal

OpenAI Unveils Agent That Can Make Spreadsheets and PowerPoints - Wall Street Journal

Google AI's new trick: Turn any image into a brief video - Axios

Building a Personal AI Factory – John Rush

The New Skill in AI is Not Prompting, It's Context Engineering – Philipp Schmid

6 tips to avoid using AI chatbots all wrong - Washington Post

How artificial intelligence is transforming the way people use the internet - NPR

AI chatbots’ content rules often frustrate users, study finds - Washington Post

Get Started With ChatGPT: A Beginner's Guide to Using the Super Popular AI Chatbot – CNET

Duke Just Introduced An Essay Question About AI—Here’s How To Tackle It - Forbes 

The Question that Will Predict How AI Impacts Your Job

A clarifying question: does AI look like it is going to do the most highly skilled part of your job or the low-skill rump that you’ve not been able to get rid of? The answer to that question may help to predict whether your job is about to get more fun or more annoying — and whether your salary is likely to rise, or fall as your expert work is devalued. -Tim Harford

23 Surprising Things AI can do now

Google DeepMind unveils an AI-powered model that creates interactive 3D worlds in real time - Google DeepMind

Parkland Shooting Victim Recreated as AI for Jim Acosta Interview.- The Guardian

AI can now beat polygraph tests to tell when you're lying – 311 Institute

The rise of AI tools that write about you when you die - Washington Post

AI Comes Up with Bizarre Physics Experiments. But They Work. – Quanta Magazine 

Missionaries using tech to contact Amazon's Indigenous people – The Week

An AI-Generated Protein Helps T Cells Kill Cancer – The-Scientist  

AI helps traditional Japanese fish-killing method get a robotic upgrade – Semafor

Google and OpenAI are vying for top AI mathlete – Axios

AI comes to California’s electric grid – Union-Tribune

AI is helping patients fight insurance company denials – NBC News

Dubai to debut restaurant operated by an AI chef – Reuters

Drones, AI and Robot Pickers: Meet the Fully Autonomous Farm – Wall Street Journal

ChatGPT Tells Pregnant Woman To 'Call an Ambulance'—Saves Their Lives - Newsweek

Large language models are proficient in solving and creating emotional intelligence tests – Nature  

How A.I. Is Transforming Wedding Planning – New York Times  

ChatGPT Is Changing the Words We Use in Conversation – Scientific American

Welcome to Your Job Interview. Your Interviewer Is A.I. – New York Times  

LooksMapping, an A.I.-powered website, rates not the food, but the attractiveness of the diners. – New York Times  

AI tool diagnoses nine types of dementia with 88% accuracy using a single PET scan – MIT Tech Review 

AI Can Keep Truck Drivers Awake - Wall Street Journal

Finding viable sperm in infertile men can take days. AI did it in hours. - Washington Post 

Everyone Is Using A.I. for Everything. Is That Bad? - New York Times

Using AI for Writing Obituaries

Two days after Jeff Fargo’s mother died, he lay in bed, crying, at home in Nevada and opened his laptop to ChatGPT. Her friends had asked about an obituary, so for nearly an hour he typed about her life. “I just … emptied my soul into the prompt,” said Fargo, 55. “I was mentally not in a place where I could give my mom what she deserved. And this did it for me.”  - Washington Post

20 Articles about AI & Academic Scholarship

Why a hybrid AI-human approach is necessary to uphold research integrity – The Hindu  

AI research journal with sham board, metrics holds researcher’s paper hostage – Retraction Watch

Artificial intelligence and the death of the academic author – Taylor & Francis

Springer Nature launches new tool to spot awkward, tortured phrases – Chemistry World

AI will soon be able to audit all published research – what will that mean for public trust in science? – The Conversation  

AI, originality, and attribution: Researchers’ perspectives on distinguishing contributions– Taylor & Francis Online

AI-Enabled Cheating Points to ‘Untenable’ Peer Review System – Inside Higher Ed

AI, bounties and culture change, how scientists are taking on errors – Nature

China tops the world in artificial intelligence publications, database analysis reveals - Science.org

Researchers are cheating peer review by hiding AI prompts in papers - The Washington Post

AI ‘scientists’ joined these research teams: here’s what happened - Nature

The accuracy-bias trade-offs in AI text detection tools and their impact on fairness in scholarly publication - PeerJ

Delving into LLM-assisted writing in biomedical publications through excess vocabulary -  Science.org 

'Positive review only': Researchers hide AI prompts in papers - Nikkei Asia

Springer Nature book on machine learning is full of made-up citations – Retraction Watch  

454 Hints That a Chatbot Wrote Part of a Biomedical Researcher’s Paper – New York Times

Are AI Bots Knocking Digital Collections Offline? - The Scholarly Kitchen 

AI, peer review and the human activity of science - Nature

Elsevier journal under fire over ‘AI-generated’ review comments – Times Higher Ed

How AI is shaking up scientific publishing - LeMonde

There’s a tiger over there! (according to my phone)

“Everybody is fighting for your attention, so your only real defense is to make it so that those stimuli don’t come in the door,” says Boston University cognitive neuroscientist David Somers. The idea that your technology should alert you when it thinks you should pay attention is relatively new, and, frankly, it’s a big step backward. You’re letting the bushes rustle nonstop, and telling yourself there’s a tiger over there.

“It’s so important that we define where we want to go as opposed to letting technology drive us and we’re just hanging on for dear life,” says author Amy Blankson, who works in the field of positive psychology, specifically on maximizing happiness.

Still, everyone gets a buzz from this high-octane news environment. Literally. Every notification, every tweet, every beep and buzz releases dopamine and other neurochemicals, providing a moment’s elation. As with any drug, your brain gets used to it. Perhaps even craves it.  

Reclaim control of what you read.

Emily Dreyfuss, Wired

AI Definitions: Data Scientist

Data Scientist - A data scientist is a person who is responsible for gleaning insight from a massive pool of data. Data scientists typically have advanced degrees in a quantitative field, like computer science, physics, statistics, or applied mathematics. With a strong understanding of math and statistics, they possess the knowledge to invent new algorithms in order to solve data problems. They will typically use programming languages like Python, R, and SQL. They will be familiar with using big data tools like Hadoop and Apache Spark and have experience working with unstructured data. If you don't see these skills on a resume, then that person probably isn't a data scientist. Advancements in AI has led the role of the data science to shift from number crunching to one of a supervisory, strategic, and ethical oversite role. Instead of producing hand-crafted models by line-by-line coding, the data scientist of the future will likely audit AI outputs, managing data ethics, and translate algorithmic outcomes into boardroom decisions.

More AI definitions here