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2026 AI Educator Summer Institute
The inaugural A.I. Educator Summer Institute begins on July 13, 2026! 
Subject: Interdisciplinary clear filter
Monday, July 13
 

10:45am EDT

Source Code Session #2: The Rise of the Machines: An Introduction to AI for Educators (AI in the Classroom is the expansion pack session)
LIMITED
Limited Capacity seats available
This Source Code Session is for educators wishing to learn the what, how, and why of A.I. This is an overview introduction to the technical and practical aspects of A.I. We will study the types of A.I., the basic underlying premise behind machine learning, and the ethical considerations we face as a society when interacting daily with A.I.

Participants will...
1. consider the appropriateness of using A.I. in certain situations;
2. measure the strengths of A.I. versus human intelligence;
3. evaluate the benefits and costs of A.I.;
4. define large language models, machine learning and the four types of A.I.;
5. examine bias and ethical considerations of LLM;
6. discuss instructional strategies for introducing ML and AI into their classrooms.

*The expansion afternoon pack workshop for this session is called: Artificial Intelligence in the Classroom: Beginner's Guide *
Speakers
avatar for Jackie Weber

Jackie Weber

Director of Educator Development Outreach Programs, SC Governor's School for Science and Mathematics
Jackie Weber is the Director of Educator Development Programs for the Outreach Center at the South Carolina Governor’s School for Science and Mathematics.  With over 28 years of nationwide experience in STEM educational leadership, she continues her focus on professional development... Read More →
Monday July 13, 2026 10:45am - 12:00pm EDT
SC Governor's School for Science and Mathematics Building (GSSM) 401 Railroad Ave., Hartsville, SC 29550
 
Tuesday, July 14
 

9:00am EDT

Source Code Session #8: Enough Data Science To Be Dangerous: Data Science Across Disciplines
LIMITED
Limited Capacity seats available
This session will engage participants in the development of a cross-disciplinary data science course aimed at students and teachers with no prior coding background. It introduces the fundamentals of Data Science across subject areas with an introduction of Python and  with Jupyter notebooks. This session will challenge participants to imagine an introductory CS course that cuts across all subjects and can be taught by someone from any department with a little motivation. All backgrounds, subject areas, and skill-levels welcome.
Speakers
avatar for Taylor Belcher

Taylor Belcher

Computer Science & Mathematics Instructor, A.I. Faculty Fellow, SC Governor's School for Science and Mathematics
Taylor is a Mathematics and Computer Science Instructor at the South Carolina Governor's School for Science and Mathematics. He taught high school and college mathematics for over a decade before joining the CS department at GSSM. He has an MA in Pure Mathematics from Bowling Green... Read More →
Tuesday July 14, 2026 9:00am - 10:15am EDT
SC Governor's School for Science and Mathematics Building (GSSM) 401 Railroad Ave., Hartsville, SC 29550

10:30am EDT

Source Code Session #8 [Repeated]: Enough Data Science To Be Dangerous: Data Science Across Disciplines
LIMITED
Tuesday July 14, 2026 10:30am - 11:45am EDT
Limited Capacity seats available
This session will engage participants in the development of a cross-disciplinary data science course aimed at students and teachers with no prior coding background. It introduces the fundamentals of Data Science across subject areas with an introduction of Python and  with Jupyter notebooks. This session will challenge participants to imagine an introductory CS course that cuts across all subjects and can be taught by someone from any department with a little motivation. All backgrounds, subject areas, and skill-levels welcome.
Speakers
avatar for Taylor Belcher

Taylor Belcher

Computer Science & Mathematics Instructor, A.I. Faculty Fellow, SC Governor's School for Science and Mathematics
Taylor is a Mathematics and Computer Science Instructor at the South Carolina Governor's School for Science and Mathematics. He taught high school and college mathematics for over a decade before joining the CS department at GSSM. He has an MA in Pure Mathematics from Bowling Green... Read More →
Tuesday July 14, 2026 10:30am - 11:45am EDT
SC Governor's School for Science and Mathematics Building (GSSM) 401 Railroad Ave., Hartsville, SC 29550
  Source Code Session, Small Group

1:15pm EDT

Expansion Pack Session #8X (Part 1): Enough Data Science To Be Dangerous: Data Science Across Disciplines
LIMITED
Limited Capacity seats available
Now that participants understand the goal and exciting potential of this course, we will start exploring the design and content of the course. In the first part of the workshop we will do a group data science activity to get used to Jupyter Notebooks and Python. In the second part of the workshop attendees will be given time to explore resources and build their own lesson in a chosen disciplinary area with the aim of building a library of activities across disciplines that could be used by this introductory course for teachers across the state. 
Speakers
avatar for Taylor Belcher

Taylor Belcher

Computer Science & Mathematics Instructor, A.I. Faculty Fellow, SC Governor's School for Science and Mathematics
Taylor is a Mathematics and Computer Science Instructor at the South Carolina Governor's School for Science and Mathematics. He taught high school and college mathematics for over a decade before joining the CS department at GSSM. He has an MA in Pure Mathematics from Bowling Green... Read More →
Tuesday July 14, 2026 1:15pm - 2:30pm EDT
SC Governor's School for Science and Mathematics Building (GSSM) 401 Railroad Ave., Hartsville, SC 29550

2:45pm EDT

Expansion Pack Session #8X (Part 2): Enough Data Science To Be Dangerous: Data Science Across Disciplines
LIMITED
Limited Capacity seats available
Now that participants understand the goal and exciting potential of this course, we will start exploring the design and content of the course. In the first part of the workshop we will do a group data science activity to get used to Jupyter Notebooks and Python. In the second part of the workshop attendees will be given time to explore resources and build their own lesson in a chosen disciplinary area with the aim of building a library of activities across disciplines that could be used by this introductory course for teachers across the state. 
Speakers
avatar for Taylor Belcher

Taylor Belcher

Computer Science & Mathematics Instructor, A.I. Faculty Fellow, SC Governor's School for Science and Mathematics
Taylor is a Mathematics and Computer Science Instructor at the South Carolina Governor's School for Science and Mathematics. He taught high school and college mathematics for over a decade before joining the CS department at GSSM. He has an MA in Pure Mathematics from Bowling Green... Read More →
Tuesday July 14, 2026 2:45pm - 4:00pm EDT
SC Governor's School for Science and Mathematics Building (GSSM) 401 Railroad Ave., Hartsville, SC 29550
 
Thursday, July 16
 

10:15am EDT

Source Code Session #25:Beyond ChatGPT: Launching South Carolina’s AI Pathway to Meet Graduation Requirements and Workforce Demand
LIMITED
Thursday July 16, 2026 10:15am - 11:15am EDT
Limited Capacity seats available
This session spotlights South Carolina’s custom-designed Introduction to Artificial Intelligence (Course 1) and the full AI Career Pathway — created specifically for our state to meet workforce demand while providing a powerful option for satisfying the computer science graduation requirement. Students learn the foundational building blocks behind AI systems, including machine learning, computer vision, natural language processing, data preparation, and responsible AI design — all through project-based units grounded in South Carolina’s priority industries.

Participants will learn implementation strategies for meeting graduation requirements while exposing students to viable career pathways, including approaches for adopting the full pathway and building dual enrollment partnerships with regional postsecondary institutions. We will share lessons from pilot implementation, strategies for embedding AI into existing CTE programs, and insights from new initiatives that connect pathway skills to real-world AI applications, validation processes, and industry. Participants will articulate how to guide students from basic AI tool use to a deeper understanding of the concepts, systems, and design behind AI technologies.
Speakers
avatar for Andrew Cook

Andrew Cook

Career Pathways Specialist, Office of Career Readiness, South Carolina Department of Education
Andrew Cook has over 40 years of experience in computer architecture and software development with a career that expands across three major technology-driven corporations - NCR, AT&T, and Intel. He began as a software developer and systems analyst at NCR and AT&T before moving into... Read More →
Thursday July 16, 2026 10:15am - 11:15am EDT
SC Governor's School for Science and Mathematics Building (GSSM) 401 Railroad Ave., Hartsville, SC 29550
  Source Code Session, Small Group

10:15am EDT

Source Code Session #28: Keeping Humans in the Loop: AI Use with Integrity
LIMITED
Thursday July 16, 2026 10:15am - 11:15am EDT
Limited Capacity seats available
AI isn’t replacing student work. It is replacing student struggle.

In an era when AI can write an essay, solve an equation, and generate a research summary in seconds, the most important question is no longer whether students can use AI — it’s whether they are thinking while they do it. This session reframes the AI-in-schools conversation away from detection and discipline toward something far more powerful: building the responsible use, critical thinking, and informed judgment that make students genuinely prepared for the world they are entering.

Drawing on the aiEDU AI Readiness Framework, participants will explore how AI bias shows up in classrooms, what it looks like to be a critical consumer of AI outputs, and how to design learning experiences that honor both human judgment and the tools that are here to stay.

By the end of this session, participants will be able to:
  1. Identify at least two ways AI systems reflect bias and explain why this matters for classroom learning and student agency.
  2. Recognize human cognitive biases — including confirmation bias and authority bias — that shape how students and teachers interact with AI outputs.
  3. Apply a framework for evaluating student AI use that centers critical thinking and responsible judgment, not detection or compliance.
  4. Redesign or adapt at least one existing task to support transparent, integrity-centered AI integration using a prompt rubric and transcript as the assessable artifact.
Speakers
avatar for LeNard Pitts

LeNard Pitts

Senior Program Lead, East Coast The AI Education Project, aiEDU- The AI Education Project
LeNard Pitts is a passionate advocate for educational equity and digital empowerment in underestimated communities. As Senior Program Lead at aiEDU, he builds the critical thinking and human judgment students need to lead in a world shaped by AI. With over a decade of experience... Read More →
Thursday July 16, 2026 10:15am - 11:15am EDT
SC Governor's School for Science and Mathematics Building (GSSM) 401 Railroad Ave., Hartsville, SC 29550
  Source Code Session, Small Group
 
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