Loading Events

Approaching Critical AI Literacy for Students and Faculty with Compassion: Nurturing Agency, Recognizing and Mitigating Bias

January 20 @ 11:00 am - 12:00 pm

AI is reshaping how students and faculty learn, teach and make decisions, raising urgent questions about bias, agency and equity in academic spaces. As these tools become embedded in everyday practice, educators need approaches that go beyond simple “how-to” skills and instead foster critical, compassionate engagement.

This webinar explores how to cultivate critical AI literacy in creative, accessible ways that support both student and faculty learning. Grounded in a compassionate learning design model, the session will examine how bias and harm can manifest in AI systems, and how we might thoughtfully respond and redress these impacts in our own contexts.

Participants will gain practical strategies to nurture human agency in the age of AI, make equity-centered decisions about when and how to use AI, and design learning experiences that invite reflection, care and ethical responsibility rather than fear or avoidance.

Key takeaways

By the end of this session, participants will be able to:

  • Promote critical AI literacy in creative and engaging ways
  • Recognize potential harms arising from bias in AI and make informed decisions about how to redress them
  • Apply the compassionate learning design model to their own approaches to AI
  • Prioritize nurturing human agency in an AI-saturated educational landscape
  • Make decisions about their response to AI that explicitly centre equity in teaching and learning

Host:

Maha Bali
Professor of Practice at the Center for Learning and Teaching, American University in Cairo

Professor Bali has a PhD in Education from the University of Sheffield, UK. She is co-founder of virtuallyconnecting.org, a grassroots movement that challenges academic gatekeeping at conferences. She is also co-facilitator of Equity Unbound, an equity-focused, open, connected intercultural learning curriculum that has branched into academic community activities Continuity with Care, Socially Just Academia, a collaboration with OneHE: Community-building Resources, and MYFest, an innovative three-month professional learning journey. She writes and speaks frequently about social justice, critical pedagogy, and open and online education. She also blogs regularly at https://blog.mahabali.me and tweets @bali_maha.

Event Details

Details

Date:
January 20
Time:
11:00 am - 12:00 pm
Event Category:
Event Tags:
Website:
https://teachonline.ca/webinars/approaching-critical-ai-literacy-for-students-and-faculty/
Organizer:

Upcoming Events

All
  • All
  • BCCampus
  • Centre for Community Partnerships
  • Centre for Faculty Development
  • Community of Practice on Sustainability Teaching
  • ContactNorthNord
  • CTSI
  • Enterprise Applications and Solutions Integration (EASI)
  • FASE Education Technology Office
  • ITS
  • Learning and Technology (ARC Support)
  • Other
  • University of Toronto Libraries
  • UTM
  • UTSC

AI Teaching and Learning Series 6 – AI-Ready Teaching: What Does This Mean for You?

March 19 @ 10:00 am - 11:00 am
Presented by: UTM, RGASC In-person on Wednesday, March 18th, 2026, 11:00am – 12:00pm in the CDRS Small Breakout Room, MN3233 Online on Thursday, March 19th, 2026, 10:00am – 11:00am on Microsoft Teams “AI...

Making Learning Visible in the GenAI Era

March 19 @ 11:10 am - 12:00 pm
Facilitator: Victoria Sheldon, Educational Developer, Teaching, Learning and Technology, CTSI  With AI tools now widely available to students, traditional assignment designs that focus only on final products may miss opportunities...

Data and Pedagogy in the Classroom: Collecting and Applying Evidence with Equity and Integrity (Online)

March 20 @ 2:00 pm - 4:00 pm
TAs work with student data all the time: grades, participation records, Quercus analytics, midterm feedback, and course evaluation comments. These data often inform how TAs grade, who they reach out...

Bolstering active learning in the classroom: Strategies to design effective questions

March 25 @ 12:00 pm - 1:00 pm
Facilitator:  Alexandra MacKay, Professor, Teaching Stream, Finance, Rotman School of Management  Lecturing can be an efficient way to convey course content to the student audience, particularly since the lecturer is...