Overview

June 29

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Artificial intelligence (AI) is rapidly changing the world, and education is no exception. AI-powered tools are now available to help students learn in a variety of ways, from personalized tutoring to automated grading. But access to AI also presents some challenges for faculty and IT leaders.

 

Large Language Models (LLM) like ChatGPT are powerful tools that have the potential to revolutionize the education industry, but how do CIOs and CISOs control the use of these tools?

 

An enterprise solution like ChatCLP helps provide better control and a number of benefits to CIOs and CISOs, such as improved security, compliance, efficiency and visibility – all while still allowing access to popular AI tools.

 

The Center for Digital Education, SADA and Google Cloud are partnering to give insight into how ChatCLP can help executives, faculty and students use AI to thrive during a live webinar on June 29 at 10 AM Pacific / 1 PM Eastern.

 

Join us for this interactive session to:

  • Learn the latest in AI and education technology trends
  • Understand the benefits of AI and how ChatCLP can help you adopt new technology while maintaining control
  • See a live demonstration of the Google ChatCLP

 

Speakers

Lukman Ramsey headshot

Lukman Ramsey

Head of AI Solutions, Public Sector and Education, Google Cloud

Lukman is global head of solutions for the Public Sector in Google Cloud, with a focus on smart analytics and AI based solutions for the education and government. Formerly he was the ML/AI Solutions lead, working with customers across Google Cloud to enable business applications in AI and ML. He speaks regularly at conferences around the world about Google’s AI technology and its applications in education, such as the keynote at the World AI Summit, EDUCAUSE, the Disney Datathon, McKinsey Analytics Forum, and Google Cloud NEXT conferences. Lukman joined Google in January of ‘17 after acting as CTO for a series of New York startups in education technology, AI and speech recognition. Most recently he was the founding CTO and Chief Product Officer for Acrobatiq, a spin-out of the Open Learning Initiative at CMU, providing machine learning analytics and courseware for both on-ground and online universities. Prior to that he was CTO of Neverware, a startup that builds virtual desktop servers for high schools. Earlier in his career he built speech recognition applications and platforms for call centers. His first startup in 2007 was a voice-driven virtual assistant for small business. Lukman did his PhD work in Computer Science at UC San Diego, doing computer vision research at JPL in the Machine Learning systems group. As an undergrad at MIT in Cognitive Science and Computer Science he worked on multi-layer neural networks before it was called "deep learning." His academic interests have always centered on the intersection of Cognitive Science and Computer Science.

Heather Sheston headshot

Heather Sheston

Director of EdTech Solutions, SADA

Heather Sheston is a Client Partner Executive focused on the public sector. She partners closely with CIOs and topline executives to grow their Google cloud footprint. Heather has over a decade of experience as a leader in the public and non-profit sector, with experience in management consultation, team building, professional development, strategic implementations and organizational collaboration initiatives. Heather most recently led the Google project team at the State of Arizona, successfully migrating nearly 36,000 users onto Google Cloud Platform. Heather has a Bachelor’s and Master’s degree from Arizona State University.

Matt Federoff headshot

Matt Federoff — Moderator

Senior Fellow, Center for Digital Government

Matt Federoff served as the Chief Information Officer for the Vail School District in Vail, Arizona for 22 years. He helped open 18 new schools, and was the first IT leader in his state to provide comprehensive wifi, 1-1 student laptops, and all digital content for instruction. Before Vail, Matt taught high school science for eight years, where he was named an Apple Distinguished Educator. Retired in 2021 after 30 years in public education and numerous awards and recognitions. Matt lives with his wife and children in Steubenville, Ohio.