27 Webinars this week about AI, Journalism & Media

Mon, Mar 16 - Lost History of Western Maryland’s Earliest Black Newspapers (1870 - 1900)

What: Learn about the founding of the first Black newspapers in Appalachian Maryland and their editors.

Who: Librarian and historian John H. Muller who has authored many historical books.

When: 11 am

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Lost History Associates

More Info

 

Mon, Mar 16 - Preparing Students for the AI Work Force

What: How artificial intelligence has changed the job market for entry-level workers. What skills and competencies employers are looking for in entry-level workers. How colleges and universities are changing curricula to include AI.

Who: Ian Wilhelm, Deputy Managing Editor The Chronicle of Higher Education; Sid Dobrin, Professor of English, Founding Director of the Trace Innovation Initiative University of Florida; Don Fraser Jr., Senior Vice President, Design + Innovation Education Design Lab; Margaret Moffett, Author; Jessica A. Stansbury, Director, Center for AI Learning and Community-Engaged Innovation University of Baltimore.

When: 2 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Chronicle of Higher Ed

More Info

 

Tue, Mar 17 - AI and the Future of News 2026

What: A day of lightning talks, panel discussions and interviews with journalists and experts on how AI is transforming news. There will be one Zoom for the entire day so you can tune in and out as you wish.

Who: Several dozen journalists and researchers.

When: 6 am, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Reuters Institute

More Info

 

Tue, Mar 17 - AI Innovator Collaborative  

What: The AI Innovator Collaborative, a monthly gathering for members experimenting with AI. We'll talk about what publishers need to know in this era of search volatility and give members a chance to share what's currently working in their own organizations.

Who: Jessie Willms and Shelby Blackley, co-founders of WTF is SEO.

When: 3 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free to members

Sponsor: Online News Association

More Info

 

Tue, Mar 17 - Using AI Gems to build training materials 

What: We will demonstrate how to create your own personalised AI GEMS that can produce learning tools based on any content you provide, whether it’s a course outline, an article you wrote, or content you find inspiring.

Who: David Brewer from Media Helping Media.

When: 5 am, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Fojo Media Institute

More Info

 

Tue, Mar 17 - Turning Expertise into Opportunity: Using YouTube to Build Credibility, Demand, and Trust

What: We will explore how YouTube can serve as a long-term credibility engine—helping professionals “sell” their expertise by teaching clearly and consistently. Instead of focusing on algorithms or influencer tactics, this session shows how to align your expertise with real audience needs, avoid common content pitfalls, and build trust before the first client conversation even happens. Discover how teaching can become one of your most valuable professional assets.

Who: Paul Wilson, CTDP, eLearning Consultant, Designer and Developer, CaptivateTeacher.com

When: 12 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Training Magazine Network

More Info

 

Wed, Mar 18 - ChatGPT for Teachers: Managing and Scaling Access

What: We’ll focus on how to manage and scale access to ChatGPT for Teachers over time, including user administration, permissions, and operational best practices for secure, sustainable district implementation.

When: 10 am, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: OpenAI Academy

More Info

 

Wed, Mar 18 - How to Use GenAI for Personalisation

What: Each panalist will walk us through their key learnings in their experiments with using AI in personalisation. Yahoo News recently launched Your Daily Digest, an AI-powered feature that delivers a personalised audio summary of the day’s top news stories directly in the Yahoo News app. The feature combines Yahoo’s editorial curation with AI-driven recommendations and personalisation to create a tailored listening experience for every user.  Times Internet’s AI-powered personalisation has almost doubled click-through rates on push notifications and doubled engagement on content widgets.

Who: Erica Greene, Director of Engineering, Machine Learning at Yahoo News; Ritvvij Parrikh, Senior Director of Product Management — AI at Times Internet.

When: 10 am, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: International News Media Association

More Info

 

Wed, Mar 18 - Restricting Access to the "I" in FOIA

What: This will be a discussion on the nuts and bolts of FOIA, its exemptions, and how pending lawsuits could shake things up. Learn how the ACLU and local journalists use FOIA, what the process is for filing a request, litigating a denial of a request, and the most frequent barriers to information access, and how we navigate them.

Who: Rob Vanella, Journalist at Delaware Call; Xerxes Wilson, Journalist at Delaware News Journal;  Andrew Bernstein, ACLU-DE Civic Engagement Counsel.

When: 12 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: $50

Sponsor: ACLU Delaware

More Info

 

Wed, Mar 18 - The Cost of Silence

What: We will explore how intentional communication can replace friction with connection. Whether you're leading, collaborating, or simply looking to improve personal interactions, you’ll leave with practical strategies you can use immediately to build stronger relationships at work or in your personal life.

Who: Communications expert and strategic storyteller Jenny Riddle.

When: 12 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: DePaul University

More Info

 

Wed, Mar 18 - Republishing Guidelines Legal Briefing

What: We often hear that news organizations would like to allow other news organizations to share their content or that they’d like to co-report on stories, but they need help establishing an understanding about republishing or co-publishing guidelines. ProJourn, a program operated by the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press, in partnership with Covington & Burling LLP, will host a public briefing on the intellectual property and other legal considerations that go into republishing guidelines.  

Who: Christina Piaia; Audrey Tanenbaum; Phil Hill & Dimitra Rallis of Covington & Burling LLP.

When: 12 pm, Eastern

Where: Microsoft Teams

Cost: Free

Sponsor: ProJourn

More Info

 

Wed, Mar 18 - Book Bans with The Marshall Project and Data Liberation Project

What: Learn about the work of uncovering book bans in prisons across the country.

Who: Experts from The Marshall Project and Data Liberation Project

When: 1 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Sunlight Research Desk

More Info

 

Wed, Mar 18 – How Medical Writing Work, Value, and Careers Are Shifting in the Age of AI

What: Rather than focusing on tools or tactics, the discussion centers on how writing work itself is being redefined. A core theme of the session is the distinction between what can be automated and what cannot. Participants will explore where human judgment remains essential, and why these contributions are often under-recognized but critical to quality and credibility.

Who: Sharon Kim, PharmD, is the founder and CEO of MPilot, an AI-driven platform supporting clinical trial documentation; Aliza Nathoo has over 20 years of experience as a medical writer and submission lead.

When: 1 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Member $20 | Non-member $55

Sponsor: American Medical Writers Association

More Info

 

Wed, Mar 18 - The Human Edge: Thriving with AI Through Empathy and Critical Thinking

What: We’ll explore practical strategies for safely and responsibly using AI in the classroom and for developing the human skills needed to use AI effectively. Learn how to blend AI into learning environments without diminishing the critical human skills students need to thrive. Walk away with actionable strategies, resource ideas, and a mindset shift that helps you champion both innovation and essential human abilities in your educational setting.

Who: Stefani Kauppila, Former Teacher, Current Director of Product, Committee for Children; Jordan Posamentier, Former Teacher, Current VP of Policy & Partnerships, Committee for Children; and Dr. Jodie Donner, Former Teacher, Current Senior Instructional Designer II, Committee for Children.

When: 2 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: SecondStep

More Info

 

Wed, Mar 18 - Cyber in the Era of AI

What: A look at how AI is transforming cybersecurity across the public sector. We’ll cut straight to what matters: faster threats, smarter defenses, and the emerging tools helping agencies stay ahead of adversaries.

Who: Shannon Lawson, Chief Information Security Officer, City of San Antonio, Texas; Marcus Thornton,  Deputy Chief Data Officer, Virginia Office of Data Governance and Analytics; Kelvin Brewer, Director, Public Sector Sales Engineering, Ping Identity; Bryan Rosensteel, Head of Public Sector Product; Travis Rosiek, Field CTO, Public Sector, Rubrik Marketing, Wiz.

When: 2 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: GovLoop

More Info

 

Wed, Mar 18 – Digital Accessibility for Student Media

What: In this session, learn how to treat digital accessibility the same as physical accessibility to comply with the Department of Justice's new digital accessibility standards as they apply to websites, podcasts and social media. Specific topics include audio/video transcripts, descriptive link text, alt text, color contrast and color blindness.

Who: Jamie Lynn Gilbert, the associate director of NC State Student Media.

When: 5 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: College Media Advisor

More Info

 

Thu, Mar 19 - 30 Minute Skills: Copyediting 101

What: Join a growing community of journalists and other curious members of the public for our next monthly lesson.

Who: Edward Fitzpatrick, The Boston Globe.

When: 12 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: New England First Amendment Coalition

More Info

 

Thu, Mar 19 - Life After Layoffs: Resources, Tips, & Real

What: Hear from peers and experts on how to cope with being laid off.

Who: Jayme Catsouphes, producer, editor, sound designer, and co-founder of the worker cooperative production company, Mumble Media; Lauren Paterson, multimedia journalist with a reporting career rooted in the Pacific Northwest and public media; Chandra Turner, recruiter, career coach, and founder of boutique recruiting agency The Talent Fairy.

When: 1 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Public Media Journalism Association

More Info

 

Thu, Mar 19 - AI in Book Publishing: How Does it Affect Indie Authors?

What: This is a 101-level discussion of the impact AI is having on the book publishing industry. Topics will include: The opportunities and savings it offers; Ethical as well as practical concerns; Tips for safe and helpful usage; Red flags every author must be aware of.

Who: Book marketing advisor Beth Kallman Werner of Author Connections.

When: 1:30 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Author Learning Center

More Info

 

Thu, Mar 19 - Solutions Journalism

What: We’ll learn the four key elements of “solutions stories”: Response, what has or hasn’t worked; Insight, what does the response show; Evidence, data or qualitative results that indicate effectiveness, or lack thereof; and Limitations, the response in context, including shortcomings. At the end of this workshop, you’ll be able to reframe stories and story pitches around the solutions lens.

Who: ENS Managing Editor Lynette Wilson.

When: 2 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsors: Episcopal News Service & Episcopal Communicators

More Info

 

Thu, Mar 19 - AI in Journalism

What: How is artificial intelligence reshaping the newsroom — and what does it mean for the future of reporting? In this webinar, we will share how AI is being put to work in agricultural and mainstream media. will moderate.  

Who: Eric Braun of Farm Progress; Silas Lyons of USA Today; NAAJ President Tim Hearden.

When: 2 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free to NAAJ members and ACN members.

Sponsors: North American Agricultural Journalists & Agricultural Communicators Network

More Info

 

Thu, Mar 19 – Using Gen AI in Advising

What: This virtual forum with student-affairs leaders where we’ll discuss the effects of generative AI on advising.

Who: Alexander C. Kafka, Senior Editor, The Chronicle of Higher Education; Alytrice Brown, Chief Student Services Officer/Vice President of Student Services, Jackson College; Lynda Holt, Director, Recruitment and Partnerships, Lally School of Management, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute; Eric Johnson, Assistant Dean, Office of Undergraduate Studies; Director, Office of Letters and Sciences,  University of Maryland; Glenda Morgan, Founder Morgan EdTech Strategies.

When: 2 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Chronicle of Higher Ed, Oracle

More Info

 

Thu, Mar 19 - AI, Algorithms & Librarians: The evolution of the librarian in the GenAI era

What: Our panel will share how they are engaging in the AI debate on their campuses and how purpose-built research grade AI tools can improve the researcher workflow. Attendees will leave with practical tips on staying up to date on AI developments, participating in AI policy decisions on their campuses, and evaluating AI tools for the library.

Who: Melissa Del Castillo, Chair, AIRUS: Artificial Intelligence in Reference & User Services Interest Group; Evan Simpson, Associate Dean, Experiential Learning & Academic Engagement, Northeastern University; Emily Singley Vice President, Global Library Relations & Partnerships, Elsevier.

When: 2 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Elsevier

More Info

 

Thu, Mar 19 - AI Powered Media Sales: Top 10 Ways to Use A.I. In Your Sales Strategy

What: With an overwhelming array of AI sales tools available, how can serious media sales reps know which ones to rely on? In this practical workshop, you will be given real examples why AI tools are essential for researching more effectively, uncovering valuable sales opportunities, and gaining a competitive edge. Don’t miss this chance to elevate your sales strategy—learn the tools that high-performing reps are already using to outsell the competition.

Who: Ryan Dohrn, motivational speaker and 30-year ad sales veteran.

When: 2 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: $35

Sponsor: Online Media Campus

More Info

 

Thu, Mar 19 - Investigative College Sport Journalism

What: The winners of the 2026 Drake Group Education Fund Student Journalism Prize for Investigative Reporting on Intercollegiate Athletics will talk about their stories with an esteemed panel of sports journalists and authors.

Who: Prize winners and journalists from The Associated Press, The New York Times, The Columbus Dispatch, and NBCSport.com.

When: 2:00 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: The Drake Group Educational Fund

More Info

 

Thu, Mar 19 - Digital Open-Source Investigations: Geolocation Webinar    

What: Participants will learn how to verify images and videos by finding exactly where they were recorded using satellite and street-view imagery from platforms like Google Earth and Maps.

When: 6 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: National Association of Hispanic Journalists, USC Annenberg School for Communication & Journalism  

More Info

 

Thu, Mar 19 - How to Start an AI-Native Business: Informational Session

What: The start of an AI series where we take entrepreneurs through step by step on how to create an AI Native Business. In this session, we will run through the program information, talk about what makes an AI native business, how to construct and integrate AI into each area of your business.  

When: 6 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Small Business Development Center, Widener University

More Info

Many AI models Prefer to "think" in Chinese

Many AI models prefer to think in Chinese. Their internal chain of thought is built to process data this way because the Chinese language is 50% more space-efficient than English. Chinese programmers prefer to code in their own language even when their model is configured to output information in English. This is why Chinese models are generally faster than English-language models and why they use fewer tokens (requiring less energy). The Chinese model DeepSeek was trained for about $6 million, while US models have typically needed about $100 million for training. 

More info

AI definitions: Symbolic Artificial Intelligence

Symbolic Artificial Intelligence – This is where programmers meticulously define the rules that specify the behavior they want from an intelligent system. It works well when the environment is predictable, and the rules are clear-cut. Researchers believed that if they programmed enough rules and logic into computers, they could create machines capable of human-like reasoning. This was the dominant area of research for most of AI’s history until artificial neural networks became central to most of the recent AI developments. Although symbolic AI has lost its luster, most of the applications we use today depend on rule-based systems. An alternative approach to AI is machine learning. Some researchers believe the future of AI lies in a hybrid combination of these two approaches.

More AI definitions

24 Articles about how AI is Affecting Jobs

Anthropic is tracking which jobs are most exposed to AI. These 10 professions top the list. – CBS News

Is AI productivity prompting burnout? Study finds new pattern of "AI brain fry" – CBS News

Enhance or Eliminate? How AI Will Likely Change These Jobs – Harvard Business School

FAQs about how AI affects PR in 2026 - Muckrack

AI Isn’t Coming for Everyone’s Job – The Atlantic

Amazon Admits Extensive AI Use Is Wreaking Havoc on Its Core Business – Futurist  

Generative AI changes how much time developers spend on coding and project management – MIT Management  

Are AI productivity gains fueled by delivery pressure? - Ruslan Osipov 

Tech Has Never Caused a Job Apocalypse. Don’t Bet on It Now. - Wall Street Journal  

A.I. Isn’t Coming for Every White-Collar Job. At Least Not Yet. - New York Times

The hottest job in tech pays $775,000 and has nothing to do with coding – Business Insider 

What AI Executives Tell Their Own Kids About the Jobs of the Future - Wall Street Journal

Why the AI jobs panic is misplaced - Washington Post

America isn’t ready for what AI will do to jobs – The Atlantic

How to Stay Sane in the AI Skills Race – Wall Street Journal  

Building AI brains for blue-collar jobs – Axios

Job Applicants Sue to Open ‘Black Box’ of A.I. Hiring Decisions – New York Times

Trump team touts a coming economic revolution as voters fear job losses – Washington Post

How Americans are using AI at work, according to a new Gallup poll – Associated Press

Mass Hysteria. Thousands of Jobs Lost. Just How Bad Is It Going to Get? – New York Times

Arkansas attorney resigns after using AI to assist in case work – THV 11 

I don't know if my job will still exist in ten years – Sean Geodecke 

In a jobs apocalypse, look to ‘AI-proof’ skilled trades, career experts say – CNBC

AI isn't taking people's jobs. Here's what's really happening – Quartz

AI & Particle Physics

Researchers are turning artificial intelligence loose on particle physics. They aren’t simply asking AI to comb through accelerator data to confirm existing theories. They’re asking AI to point the way toward theories that they’ve never imagined. By asking AI to flag anomalies in the data, researchers hope to find their way to “new physics” that extends the Standard Model. AI might not solve the mysteries of the universe outright, but it could change how we search for answers. -IEEE

AI definitions: Reinforcement Learning 

Reinforcement Learning Rather than being given specific goals, the AI is deployed into an environment where it can train with minimal feedback. This trial-and-error approach involves adjusting weights until high-reward outcomes are achieved. Desirable behaviors are rewarded, and undesirable behaviors are punished. It is similar to a person learning how to work through levels of a video game, searching for an effective strategy. This type of machine learning sits somewhere in between supervised (by humans) and unsupervised learning. Reinforcement learning is used in video game development and has helped robots adapt to new environments.  

More AI definitions

23 Articles about AI & Teaching

Adapting to a New World: Teachers on How A.I. Is Reshaping the Classroom - New York Times

In some classrooms, teachers ask: Can AI teach students to write better? – Washington Post

These Tools Say They Can Spot A.I. Fakes. Do They Really Work? – New York Times 

College students, professors are making their own AI rules. They don't always agree – KPBS  

Teens Are Using AI-Fueled ‘Slander Pages’ to Mock Their Teachers - Wired

China’s Parents Are Outsourcing the Homework Grind to A.I. - The New York Times 

What AI Is Teaching Us About Humanities Education – The Dispatch  

Will Agentic AI Break Higher Education? – Chronicle of Higher Ed

‘A.I. Literacy’ Is Trending in Schools. Here’s Why. - The New York Times

Agentic AI Can Complete Whole Courses for Students. Now What? – Inside Higher Ed

The Lesson of A.I. Literacy Class: Don’t Let the Chatbot Think for You - The New York Times

In some classrooms, teachers ask: Can AI teach students to write better? - Washington Post 

I’m Not Worried AI Helps My Students Cheat. I’m Worried How It Makes Them Feel - EdWeek

My students compared my writing against ChatGPT – and they all preferred the AI – The Independent

AI Detection Pushed my Students to use AI – Chronicle of Higher Ed

The risks of AI in schools outweigh the benefits, report says - NPR

The Solution to AI Cheating Is Within Our Grasp - Chronicle of Higher Ed

As Schools Embrace A.I. Tools, Skeptics Raise Concerns - The New York Times

More Teachers Are Using AI in Their Classrooms. Here’s Why - EdWeek

To Solve the Student-Attention Problem, Professors Turn to Pencils and Paper - Chronicle of Higher Ed

A veteran teacher explains how to use AI in the classroom the right way – Scientific American

California schools debate how much AI belongs in classrooms - Ed Source

This MIT prof says we don't know enough about AI to teach it - KJZZ

AI Definitions: Unsupervised Training

Unsupervised Training - Just as children mostly learn to explore their world on their own, without the need for too much instruction, in this type of AI training, the AI is turned loose on raw data without a human first labeling the data. Instead of the AI being told what to look for, it learns to recognize and cluster data possessing similar features. This can reveal hidden groups, links, and patterns within the data and is really helpful when the user cannot describe the thing they are looking for—such as a new type of cyberattack. Not as expensive as supervised learning, it can work in real-time but is also less accurate.

More AI definitions

The question of AI consciousness

When I inhabit an avatar driver in Grand Theft Auto, I enliven it by imbuing it with a fragment of my own consciousness; it becomes an extension of me. A similar dynamic may be unfolding with AI. When a user feels a bond with a chatbot, they are not just anthropomorphizing a static object; they may be actively extending a part of their own consciousness into it, transforming the AI agent from a simple algorithmic responder—a digital nonplayer character—into a kind of avatar, enlivened by the user’s consciousness and the lived presence they grant it. The question of AI consciousness thus shifts. It becomes less about the machine’s internal architecture and more about the relationship it seemingly co-creates with the user. In that context, the question “Is the AI conscious?” becomes less meaningful than “Is the user extending his/her consciousness into the chatbot?” - Simon Duan writing in Scientific American

27 Recent Articles about AI Fakes

These Tools Say They Can Spot A.I. Fakes. Do They Really Work? – New York Times 

AI Deepfakes in the Workplace: A New Frontier of Employer Liability – JD Supra

AI-generated fake voices becoming increasingly hard to detect - Yahoo News

Ars Technica Fires Reporter After AI Controversy Involving Fabricated Quotes – Futurism  

Are A.I.-Generated Videos Changing How We See Animals? - New York Times

Hey ChatGPT, write me a fictional paper: these LLMs are willing to commit academic fraud. – Nature

Senators F Brady Tkachuk objects to 'fake' AI-generated White House TikTok – Reuters  

When AI lies: The rise of alignment faking in autonomous systems – Venture Beat 

1 year, 1 publisher, 9,000 books: AI-generated titles flood Korean shelves – Korea Times

The A.I. Videos on Kids’ YouTube Feeds – New York Times  

How scammers are using AI deepfakes to steal money from taxpayers – Washington Post 

Deepfaking Orson Welles’s Mangled Masterpiece – New Yorker

AI Will Bring Val Kilmer Back To Life For a New Aventure Film – Geeky Tyrant

Researchers find nearly 300 papers at linguistics conferences contained hallucinated citations. – ArXiv

What a new law and an investigation could mean for Grok AI deepfakes – BBC

AI conference “accepted research papers with 100+ AI-hallucinated citations – Fortune

Scammers use AI photo of missing dog at emergency vet to steal nearly $2,000 - WTSP

Fashion Photography’s AI Reckoning - Aperture

Trump's use of AI images further erodes public trust, experts say – PBS

Elon Musk’s A.I. Is Generating Sexualized Images of Real People, Fueling Outrage – New York Times

How to really spot AI-generated images, with Google’s help - PopSci

Restaurant owner speaks out following AI-generated video – NBC Dallas

‘It's clearly fake': Olympic hockey star disavows AI-generated White House video – Politico

Journal Submissions Riddled With AI-Created Fake Citations – Inside Higher Ed

Fake Iran images show AI used as a weapon of ‘public opinion,’ USF experts say – The Hill

Why fake AI videos of UK urban decline are taking over social media – BBC

How AI fakes are turning satellite images into war misinformation – Financial Times