Educational policy mastermind Dr. Jim Castagnera will show you specific provisions to consider and explain how the various options will impact your school and students. You will learn how other school districts are handling generative artificial intelligence.
What You'll Learn
- What are the pros and cons of policy options?
- How can you address academic-integrity challenges?
- What are the pedagogical abilities and limitations of ChatGPT?
- How can you create a comprehensive policy for ChatGPT across grade levels?
- How should you inform and advise parents?
Training Overview
Has your school banned ChatGPT? Discover what a reasonable AI policy should include.
When ChatGPT burst on the scene last November, no space was more heavily challenged than K–12 education. With a broad spectrum of education obligations, students and teachers face vastly different requirements and opinions.
Conscientious, concerned educators are asking fundamental questions: Should generative AI tools be banned from our schools? If not, do we ignore super chatbots and hope our students will too? Or do we embrace this revolutionary technology and make it a positive force in the classroom?
Freeze, flee, or embrace? Whichever path your school district chooses, the choice holds challenges and consequences.
- What are the pros and cons of policy options?
- How can you address academic-integrity challenges?
- What are the pedagogical abilities and limitations of ChatGPT?
- How can you create a comprehensive policy for ChatGPT across grade levels?
- How should you inform and advise parents?
Who Should Attend?
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Expert Presenter


Dr. Jim Castagnera
- Served for 23 years as associate provost and legal counsel for academic affairs at Rider University, where he received the university’s highest annual award for distinguished service
- President of Dr. Jim’s One-Stop HR Shop, a full-service HR law and compliance company
- Partner with Portum Group International LLC, a data-privacy and compliance-consulting firm
- Of Counsel to the Wilftek law firm
- Adjunct Professor of Law in the Kline School of Law at Drexel University
- Arbitrator for the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
- Taught at UT-Austin and Widener University Law School as a full-time law professor
- Previously worked as a labor, employment, and intellectual-property attorney with Saul Ewing Arnstein & Lehr
- M.A. in Journalism from Kent State University
- J.D. and Ph.D. (American Studies) from Case Western Reserve University
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