Human by Design: Turning Static Handouts into Interactive Gemini Learning Tools

Educators frequently rely on static handouts to support reflective learning, yet these materials can unintentionally increase cognitive load and restrict opportunities for meaningful student engagement. Research on inclusive design, belonging, and metacognitive practice highlights the importance of creating structures that help learners process ideas clearly while maintaining their voice and autonomy (Felten and Lambert, 2020; Strayhorn, 2018; Tocco, 2023). This session will demonstrate a practical, replicable process for transforming a traditional classroom handout into an interactive Gemini based learning tool that strengthens clarity, supports reflective thinking, and promotes equitable participation.

The presenter will introduce an original handout designed to help students identify their personal style of motivation. The session will outline challenges that emerged when the handout was delivered in static form, including ambiguity, uneven access to language, and limited opportunities for agency. The redesigned Gemini version will then be demonstrated to show how guided prompts, structured steps, and transparent scaffolding can reduce confusion, support intentional reflection, and preserve ethical boundaries by keeping human judgment at the center of the learning experience.

Participants will take part in a brief structured activity in which they revise one instruction from a sample handout using three guiding principles introduced in the session. They will leave with a clear method for converting their own instructional materials into interactive AI supported learning experiences that align with human centered, purpose driven educational practice.

Syreeta Washington, University of Hawaiʻi- Leeward Community College, US

Syreeta Washington is an Assistant Professor and academic advisor at Leeward Community College in Hawaiʻi, where she works with Dual Enrollment and Early College students and teaches Interdisciplinary Studies courses. Her work centers on helping students build confidence, navigate college with greater clarity, and connect their education to meaningful futures. With a background in counseling, teaching, and professional speaking, she brings a practical, student-centered approach to every space she enters.

Syreeta is especially known for her engaging presentations on academic advising, student success, equity-minded practice, and the thoughtful use of artificial intelligence in education. She has presented at regional, national, and international conferences, where her sessions are recognized for being interactive, grounded, and immediately useful to educators and advisors. Her work often focuses on how small, intentional shifts in teaching and advising can create stronger outcomes for students, especially those who are first-generation or under-resourced.

In addition to her work on campus, Syreeta is a writer, speaker, and creative thinker who values connection, reflection, and purpose. She is committed to helping educators use both heart and strategy to support student growth and success.

TCC Hawaii invites faculty, researchers, librarians, counselors, student affairs and student support professionals, graduate students, administrators, and consultants from around the world interested in evolving technologies and learning practices to submit proposals for this online conference.

From Awareness to Application: Leveraging Generative AI in Teaching and Learning

This workshop on human-tech synergy and leveraging digital tools for engagement and efficiency in higher ed, focuses on empowering educators with the knowledge and skills to integrate generative AI into teaching and learning. Participants will explore AI literacy as a vital skill for both instructors and students, learning how to responsibly and creatively apply AI in classroom settings to boost engagement, efficiency, and equity while incorporating Universal Design Learning.

The session introduces frameworks for developing AI-integrated curricula that foster creativity, critical thinking, and digital fluency. Prompt engineering and course and assessment development. Educators will see firsthand how AI can personalize instruction, automate routine tasks, and enhance student participation. Through interactive exercises such as collaborative whiteboarding, guided AI demonstrations, and curriculum sprints participants will gain practical experience with AI tools and reflect on their ethical and pedagogical implications.

By the end of the workshop, attendees will leave with actionable strategies, draft lesson ideas, and renewed confidence in leveraging technology to support human connection and creativity in the classroom.

Feygens Saint-Joy, Jr., Monroe University, US

Feygens Saint-Joy Jr. is a futurist, global marketing consultant, and AI strategist operating at the intersection of marketing, data, and emotional intelligence. He is the Founder and Chief AI & Emotional Intelligence Strategist at Joytelligence, where he advances human-centered innovation by integrating artificial intelligence with emotional intelligence to drive meaningful impact. Feygens is an MBA Professor at Monroe University, where he teaches Strategic Marketing, AI, and Data Innovation.

TCC Hawaii invites faculty, researchers, librarians, counselors, student affairs and student support professionals, graduate students, administrators, and consultants from around the world interested in evolving technologies and learning practices to submit proposals for this online conference.

Exploring the Impact of Artificial Intelligence Role-Playing Chatbots on Classroom Management Competencies

This interactive session discusses the results of a research study on the use of artificial intelligence (AI) role-playing chatbots to support classroom management skill development among pre-service teachers. Presenters will share details regarding the creation of the chatbot to simulate common disruptive or defiant student behaviors as well as role-playing scenarios. Key findings demonstrated statistically significant gain in classroom management self-efficacy. Participants will learn how to create and train their own coach GPT chatbot for use in their respective academic contexts.

Upon completion of this session, participants will be able to:

  1. Describe the steps of staging an AI chatbot classroom intervention for scaffolding skills acquisition.
  2. Discuss potential applications of AI-chatbot role-playing exercises on skills and competency development.
  3. Create a customized coach GPT chatbot for use within various instructional or programmatic contexts in K12 or higher education.

Rae Mancilla, University of Pittsburgh, US

Rae Mancilla is the Executive Director of University Digital Education at the University of Pittsburgh Center for Excellence in Digital Education (Pitt EDGE). She leads institution-wide strategy and innovation in digital learning, advancing online and hybrid program development, academic excellence and cross-campus collaboration. A dynamic leader in higher education, she works closely with Pitt’s 16 schools and industry partners to strengthen the quality, accessibility and impact of digital education across the University.

With over two decades of experience in instructional design, curriculum development, faculty development, program evaluation and assessment, Mancilla is a nationally recognized expert in online learning and digital accessibility. She currently serves as vice chair of the Quality Matters Instructional Design Association, a bilingual peer evaluator for the Middle States Commission on Higher Education, a Quality Matters Master Reviewer and Research Colleague, and an invited scholar for the International Board of Standards for Training, Performance and Instruction.
Mancilla’s research interests include instructional designer professional development, digital accessibility and program evaluation. She is the co-editor of Guide to Digital Accessibility: Policies, Practices and Professional Development (2023, Stylus) and co-author of Mentoring Instructional Designers in Higher Education (forthcoming 2026, Routledge).


Abigail Dutcher, Indiana Wesleyan University, US

Dr. Abigail Dutcher is an Assistant Professor in the Division of Teacher Education at the University of Saint Francis in Indiana. With over a decade of experience in K–12 education and instructional coaching, her work focuses on preparing pre-service teachers through innovative, research-informed practices. Her scholarship explores the integration of artificial intelligence in lesson planning and teacher preparation, as well as inclusive and equitable instructional design. Dr. Dutcher is committed to developing educators who use technology, inquiry, and culturally responsive practices to support diverse learners.

 

 

TCC Hawaii invites faculty, researchers, librarians, counselors, student affairs and student support professionals, graduate students, administrators, and consultants from around the world interested in evolving technologies and learning practices to submit proposals for this online conference.

Emotional Technology™ in an AI World: Human-Centered Leadership for Creative Learning

As artificial intelligence reshapes learning, the most essential work for educators is not only technological adaptation, but emotional capacity. This session introduces Emotional Technology™, a human-centered leadership framework that helps educators understand and regulate their nervous systems in order to lead with clarity, creativity, and connection in AI-supported learning environments.

Emotional Technology™ bridges somatic awareness, trauma-informed practice, and decolonial approaches to emotional literacy. In an era where AI tools accelerate workflow, intensify decision-making, and alter educator–student dynamics, nervous system literacy becomes foundational to maintaining purpose, presence, and human trust. When educators feel overwhelmed or dysregulated, they are more likely to misuse technology, disengage from creativity, or default to rigid practices that hinder innovation.

This session examines how stress responses shape educator–student relationships, technological adoption, and community culture. Participants will explore the emotional impact of automation, bias, algorithmic influence, and the rapid pace of educational change—while learning practices that support grounded decision-making and purposeful integration of AI.

Attendees will leave with practical, immediately usable strategies that strengthen emotional steadiness, improve communication, and cultivate creative resilience. Emotional Technology™ provides a framework for designing learning spaces that prioritize humanity, equity, and belonging—ensuring that AI enhances the educator’s purpose rather than replaces their presence.

Tika Simone, Iverna Island (Creative Leadership & Wellness Organization), CA

TCC Hawaii invites faculty, researchers, librarians, counselors, student affairs and student support professionals, graduate students, administrators, and consultants from around the world interested in evolving technologies and learning practices to submit proposals for this online conference.

Scaling AI Literacy: A Framework for Sharing, Scaffolding, and Refining Generative AI Prompts

While Generative AI is becoming ubiquitous, effective “prompt engineering” remains a siloed skill. This interactive session moves beyond basic AI introductions to propose a framework for communal prompt engineering—the practice of documenting, sharing, and scaffolding prompts for widespread institutional use.

Participants will learn to transform their personal AI workflows into accessible pedagogical tools using the “Prompt Sharing Kit” model. We will explore how to scaffold prompts so that beginners can achieve immediate results, while advanced users are encouraged to customize and refine the underlying logic.

Key areas of focus include:

Documentation: How to annotate prompts to explain why specific instructions yield results.

Pedagogy: Strategies for embedding shared prompts into assignments to shift focus from text generation to critical analysis.

Ethics: Defining acceptable use boundaries within prompt instructions.

Through hands-on “prompt audits” and collaborative design exercises, participants will create shareable templates to foster a culture of AI transparency and collaboration on their home campuses.

Satoru Shinagawa, U. of Hawaii, Kapiolani CC, US

Satoru Shinagawa began teaching Japanese online in 1999, long before “asynchronous” was a household word. He is passionate about using technology to create accessible, effective, and modern language-learning experiences for students worldwide.

TCC Hawaii invites faculty, researchers, librarians, counselors, student affairs and student support professionals, graduate students, administrators, and consultants from around the world interested in evolving technologies and learning practices to submit proposals for this online conference.

Using Speculative Fiction to Navigate the Edtech Schism

This interactive forum session uses speculative fiction to help educators navigate the polarized high-tech vs np-tech debate. Participants will be immersed in the short story Same Time Tomorrow (2040), which juxtaposes two elementary schools: one embracing hyper-personalized AI-driven learning, the other focused on embodied, social and nature-based education.

The story evaluated against Hrastinski’s (2023) criteria for educational fiction, serves as a neutral driver for critical reflection. Following the audio story, a facilitated discussion will use polling and structured prompts to explore the values and trade-offs like efficiency vs. connection, data vs. experience present in each future. The discussion is framed by critical postdigital theory (Selwyn, 2020; Zuboff, 2019) moving beyond simple tool adoption to examine the political and economic choices shaping our educational systems.

Participants will take away a practical reflective method and critical questions to apply in their own contexts, fostering more intentional, values-driven leadership in an era of rapid technological change.

Eduardo Silva, Tampere University of Applied Sciences (TAMK), CN

Eduardo Silva is an international elementary teacher, summer camp enthusiast and MBA in Educational Leadership candidate at TAMK. He bridges academic rigor with narrative flair, using speculative Social Science Fiction to critique competing educational trends. His work explores the intersection of high-tech innovation and human-centered learning in schools of the future. Silva challenges present technological choices through storytelling that makes us reflect on our current educational values.

TCC Hawaii invites faculty, researchers, librarians, counselors, student affairs and student support professionals, graduate students, administrators, and consultants from around the world interested in evolving technologies and learning practices to submit proposals for this online conference.

Reshaping the Teaching & Learning Process: Building an AI Learning Community

As generative artificial intelligence continues to reshape the educational landscape, it is important for institutions of higher education to bring faculty together to engage in conversations around the responsible and effective use of these tools in the teaching and learning process. While many may assume faculty are already prepared to integrate AI into the teaching and learning process, it is important the focus is not just on the tools themselves but how to effectively and responsibly use them to enhance the educational experience of students. This session will offer a practical approach to building a faculty learning community from the early planning stages, establishing collaborative partnerships on campus or within your community, designing the educational content, and ensuring a successful experience for all who participate. Although the primary focus is on developing a faculty learning community, these strategies can apply to building a learning community across your institution or in the community you serve. Data will be presented during this session to provide context to what faculty want to learn through an experience like this.

Dr. Michael LaMagnaMichael LaMagna, Delaware County Community College, US

Dr. Michael LaMagna is the Information Literacy Program & Library Services Coordinator and Professor of Library Services at Delaware County Community College in Pennsylvania and previously served as the Coordinator of Electronic Resources at a small liberal arts college. His work applies strategic foresight methodologies to anticipate and examine how emerging technologies and learner expectations are reshaping higher education and academic libraries. This futures-oriented lens grounds his research on information access including collection development and open educational resources, and on the design of scalable, equitable information literacy programs, with particular emphasis on digital badges, microcredentials, and synchronous instruction models. More recently his focus is on integrating AI literacy into existing information literacy instruction. Michael is a host on the New Books in Library Science podcast channel on the New Books Network.


Andrea Rodgers, Delaware County Community College, US

Andrea Rodgers is an Associate Professor and Reference Librarian at Delaware County Community College, where she supports student learning through information literacy instruction, manages electronic resources, and oversees the development and maintenance of the library’s website. With more than 15 years of experience in higher education, she is committed to helping students navigate digital research environments. Her academic interests include information literacy education, user experience in online research, and student engagement with electronic resources. Andrea holds a M.S. in Library and Information Science from Drexel University. Her work has been published in Reference Services Review, Computers in Libraries, Collection and Curation, College & Research Libraries News, and the Journal of Electronic Resources Librarianship. She is a co-chair of the Community College LINK annual conference.

TCC Hawaii invites faculty, researchers, librarians, counselors, student affairs and student support professionals, graduate students, administrators, and consultants from around the world interested in evolving technologies and learning practices to submit proposals for this online conference.

Supporting Adult Learners’ Self-Regulated Learning Through Guided Use of Generative AI

Adult learners are often described as self-regulated and highly motivated, yet many struggle to sustain engagement while balancing full-time work, family responsibilities, and academic demands. Although they have strong autonomy, they still rely on meaningful support from peers and instructors. As generative AI (GenAI) becomes increasingly integrated into professional contexts, adult learners are curious about how these tools can enhance their learning. While concerns remain about reduced learner agency, recent studies suggest that guided and intentional use of GenAI can support motivation and strengthen self-regulated learning (SRL) by helping learners brainstorm, clarify understanding, and engage in reflective dialogue.

This study examined how GenAI can function as a thinking partner to support adult learners’ SRL within the first cycle of an ongoing design-based research project. GenAI was integrated into a fully online course for non-traditional students in a degree-completion program. After completing an AI literacy module in Week 1, students selected from three structured AI-supported strategies, including clarifying understanding, exploring ideas, and seeking feedback, to complete weekly course activities.

Using students’ AI interaction dialogues and end-of-semester reflections, this initial cycle investigated which AI-supported strategies students used most, how the three phases of SRL (forethought, performance, and self-reflection) appeared in their AI dialogues, and what design considerations are needed for future GenAI integration. Based on student experiences and observed patterns of SRL, the presentation will offer recommendations for designing GenAI-enhanced coursework and implications for instructional designers and online instructors who aim to integrate GenAI into adult online learning environments.

Hajeen Choi, Bowling Green State University, US

Dr. Hajeen Choi is an Assistant Teaching Professor in Management & Technology and Instructional Design & Technology programs at Bowling Green State University. She earned her Ph.D. in Instructional Systems and Learning Technologies from Florida State University. Her research focuses on learner motivation and engagement in networked learning, with particular attention to sociocultural and emotional factors that shape participation. She also examines human–AI collaboration to support motivation and knowledge co-construction as a thinking partner.


Daeun Jung, Chungnam National University, KR

Dr. Daeun Jung is a Visiting Scholar at the Education Research Institute at Seoul National University. She earned her Ph.D. in Instructional Systems and Learning Technologies from Florida State University. She currently teaches AI Literacy and Educational Technology at Pai Chai and Soongsil Universities. Her research explores how technology interacts with learners’ sociocultural contexts, shaping educational inequality. She also examines the intersection of AI and education, with a focus on human agency.

TCC Hawaii invites faculty, researchers, librarians, counselors, student affairs and student support professionals, graduate students, administrators, and consultants from around the world interested in evolving technologies and learning practices to submit proposals for this online conference.

Disengaged vs. Engaged students – how can faculty encourage a more engaging discussion environment through video & AI use in the online classroom?

Classroom engagement in higher education online classrooms can be challenging because students often feel detached from faculty and other classmates since they aren’t together in a face-to-face environment.  This detachment can mean less students participate in the online discussions as well as less-robust discussions from those who do participate, and ultimately, could lead to decreased learning.  Overall, research indicates that instructors are crucial in encouraging student engagement through relationship building as well as ensuring they are providing opportunities for students to relate what they are learning to the real-world (Prokop, 2025).  Therefore, online faculty need to consider additional strategies for creating a more engaging and interactive discussion environment for students. One of these strategies could be the use of video discussions, which could also incorporate AI technology either in the video creation or in discussion prompts. This could also have the added benefit of demonstrating effective AI-use for students. 

As part of this presentation, discussion and participant interaction will be encouraged in response to the following questions:

  1. How do you know if your students are engaged in your classroom discussions?
  2. How might video discussions be used in your classroom? 
  3. What role could AI tools play in classroom discussions? 

As part of the discussion around these questions, the authors will provide relevant research as well as personal experiences related to their own experiences in the online classroom with engaged and unengaged students, and the use of video discussions.  The authors, who are full-time faculty for the online campus at their University, have researched this topic as part of a project on incorporating video discussions into their online classroom facilitation.

Tracy Crawford, University of Phoenix, US

Tracy Crawford, MAEd, lives in sunny Encinitas, CA and is a full-time faculty member teaching introductory courses for the College of General Studies with University of Phoenix where she has been working as a staff member since 2004. She earned a Master’s degree in Education – Curriculum & Instruction/Adult Education Distance Learning and completed a Post-Baccalaureate Teacher Education Program for her Elementary Teaching certificate. Tracy has been involved in education not only as a teacher and administrator, but also as a volunteer as a United Way Reading Buddy, and has volunteered with Head Start, and Art Masterpiece programs, and she has served as a Faculty Supervisor for student teachers. Tracy has received a number of faculty awards and recognition including being named Faculty of the Year in 2017 and 2020, and the John Sperling Distinguished Faculty Award in 2024 & 2025. Tracy’s true passion is helping her students learn and grow!


Lauren Critchley, University of Phoenix, US

Lauren Critchley earned her Bachelor of Arts in English at Brigham Young University in 1994 and her Master of Arts in English at University of North Florida (UNF) in 1997. While completing graduate school at UNF, Lauren taught developmental reading and writing at Florida Gateway College in Lake City, Florida. After graduating from UNF, Lauren accepted a full-time faculty position at the University of West Georgia. Lauren has since taught writing, speech, reading, and literature courses at Richland Community College in Illinois, Roane State Community College in Tennessee, and Brigham Young University in Idaho. In 2013, Lauren accepted a full-time teaching position with University of Phoenix where she currently teaches introductory writing courses along with college skills and critical thinking courses. Lauren has over 25 years of experience teaching in higher education with 10 of those years in online education.

TCC Hawaii invites faculty, researchers, librarians, counselors, student affairs and student support professionals, graduate students, administrators, and consultants from around the world interested in evolving technologies and learning practices to submit proposals for this online conference.

From Obligation to Opportunity: Using UDL to Design Courses That Are Equally Accessible and Engaging

This session reframes accessibility as an opportunity to improve course quality and student motivation rather than a checklist to satisfy. Participants will learn how Universal Design for Learning (UDL) creates engaging, flexible learning environments that support all students, particularly those who may not request accommodations or recognize barriers. Through examples, mini case studies, and practical design strategies, attendees will explore how to identify common barriers and convert them into engaging design decisions that benefit the entire class. This presentation equips participants with simple, scalable practices that make learning more inclusive without increasing faculty workload. The goal is to help educators view accessibility and UDL as foundational to high-quality pedagogy, not a burdensome requirement.

Carla GhanemCarla Ghanem, Maricopa Community College District, US

Dr. Carla Ghanem is an instructional designer for the Maricopa Center for Learning and Innovation at the Maricopa County Community College District. Her interests include course and assessment design, educational technology, usage of emerging technology, such as Artificial Intelligence (AI). Additionally, she is interested in approaches to course design leveraging hybrid, HyFlex, and online (synchronous and asynchronous) environments. Carla has been designing, developing, and facilitating courses district-wide on technology (including AI, multimedia, digital tools, etc.), learner-centered teaching practices, assessment, classroom management, etc. More recently, she has been leading district-wide accessibility efforts in alignment with WCAG 2.1 Level AA guidelines. She is actively engaged in professional groups worldwide, such as AI in Education, AI and Instructional Design, etc. She received her Ph.D. in Interdisciplinary Applied Linguistics & Cultural Studies from The University of Texas at Austin, where her dissertation focused on instructors’ identities and teaching practices, specifically with regard to teaching culture. She has three M.A.s in American Studies, Applied Linguistics, and German, an M.Ed, and an M.S. in Mathematics.

TCC Hawaii invites faculty, researchers, librarians, counselors, student affairs and student support professionals, graduate students, administrators, and consultants from around the world interested in evolving technologies and learning practices to submit proposals for this online conference.