
More than 50 online students and several alumni from the Information School鈥檚 Master of Science in Information Management program gathered at the University of Washington campus for the second annual Student Summit to discuss leadership and artificial intelligence.
The Jan. 26-27 summit began with a Friday evening reception at Kane Hall, featuring a keynote conversation with Stephanie Ballard, senior practice development manager in Microsoft鈥檚 Office of Responsible AI. Ballard is an alum of both the Master of Library and Information Science and Ph.D. programs at the iSchool. Professor and MSIM program chair David Hendry posed questions to Ballard about how generative AI has affected her job, which she said changed substantially with the advent of ChatGPT 4.
Ballard said she finds generative AI tools useful in creating first drafts of emails and documents, alleviating the 鈥渢error of the blank page.鈥 However, she said, AI doesn鈥檛 replace people鈥檚 decision-making.

鈥淪omething that really resonates with the way that we position the technologies we build at Microsoft is a really intentional choice to call them 鈥榗o-pilots鈥 鈥 things that assist you in your work and help to make you more productive, and not things that work to replace your critical thinking skills,鈥 she said.
Ballard answered several questions from the audience, including one about 鈥渞ed teaming,鈥 a tactic engineers use to try to push the boundaries of AI and find weaknesses in order to expose them before products go on the market.
鈥淎 lot of this boils down to trying to make an AI system do quite bad things. We find when we do this kind of testing, we have more successful launches.鈥
A Saturday full of workshops at Mary Gates Hall followed, featuring topics such as 鈥淰alue Sensitive Design & AI,鈥 鈥淐ultural Politics of Responsible AI,鈥 and 鈥淪elf-Organizing Teams in an Agile Environment.鈥 Agueda Sanchez, an MSIM alum and now senior privacy product manager at Microsoft, presented on 鈥淏uilding Trust Experiences for AI.鈥

A session on 鈥淩egression Analysis Using R鈥 was particularly helpful to Mid-Career MSIM student Shane Miller.
鈥淓xperiencing a training session hands-on in the computer lab was great,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat session鈥檚 content happened to be a perfect fit for where I鈥檓 at in my learning experience.鈥
Miller, who lives in Port Angeles and works as an IT manager for the Clallam County public library system, called the Saturday sessions 鈥渟uper useful.鈥
鈥淢eeting all these people I'd been working with online but never met in person was awesome. Plus, we got to meet others as well 鈥 alumni, for example,鈥 he said.
The sessions included a fishbowl conversation on leadership, where participants discussed the book 鈥淒are to Lead鈥 by Bren茅 Brown. In a fishbowl conversation, people sit in a circle and take turns getting their chance to go to the middle and speak. Attendees were highly engaged throughout the session, offering their thoughts on Brown鈥檚 approach to encouraging leadership at every level of an organization.
Hendry called it an 鈥渁mazing event.鈥 The student summit, he said, is 鈥渙ne step toward our collective goal: a community of MSIM alumni who are data-driven, socially conscious information leaders.鈥

Pictured at top: Michelle Durham, MSIM '23, speaks during the fishbowl conversation.