How to use ChatGPT and other generative AI tools in your newsrooms - Journalism Courses by Knight Center

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On Demand

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4

How to use ChatGPT and other generative AI tools in your newsrooms

Are you ready to explore how artificial intelligence can transform your newsroom? Enroll in the Knight Center’s free on-demand course, “How to Use ChatGPT and Other Generative AI Tools in Your Newsrooms,” led by industry experts Aimee Rinehart, Senior Product Manager of AI Strategy at The Associated Press, and Sil Hamilton, AI Researcher-in-Residence at Hacks/Hackers.

This course is designed for journalists and communicators, offering the flexibility to learn at your own pace and on your schedule. By registering, you’ll gain access to a curated collection of video lessons, insightful readings, quizzes, discussion forums, and additional resources, all tailored to help you implement AI effectively in your newsroom.

 The course materials are divided into five modules, along with an introductory module:

 

The course materials build off each other, but the videos and readings also act as standalone resources that you can return to over time.

Get Started Today!

Register now for free and gain immediate access to all course materials, including video classes and quizzes, designed to help you integrate AI into your newsroom with confidence.

If you have any questions, please contact us at journalismcourses@austin.utexas.edu.

Aimee Rinehart is the Senior Product Manager of AI Strategy for The Associated Press. Before joining the AP, she was the Deputy Director of First Draft’s New York bureau helping journalists and newsrooms to identify, verify and report on mis- and disinformation through the 2018 and 2020 U.S. election cycles. In 2018, she managed Comprova, a project to monitor and analyze misinformation and disinformation around the 2018 Brazilian elections. Aimee started working online in 1996 and was a digital originator at The New York Times, and returned to print briefly as an editor at the Wall Street Journal Europe in Brussels. She served on the steering committee for Partnership on AI’s AI Procurement and Use Guidebook for Newsrooms, and is a council member advising the direction of the newly formed Consortium on Trust in Media and Technology at the University of Florida. Aimee is in the 2024 cohort of the Executive Program in News Innovation and Leadership at the Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism CUNY as the Tow-Knight Fellow in AI Studies.

Sil HamiltonSil Hamilton is an AI researcher-in-residence at Hacks/Hackers, a network of journalists who rethink the future of news through talks, hackathons, and conferences. He is also a machine learning researcher at McGill University exploring the intersection of AI and culture, Sil has published research at NLP conferences like ACL, AAAI, and COLING. His work exploring the limits of language models has been discussed by Wired, The Financial Times, and Le Devoir. Sil has given talks on AI and the newsroom at the Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard; the Brown Institute for Media Innovation at Columbia; the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, California; and The Knight Center for Journalism in the Americas at the University of Texas at Austin. Sil has consulted for The Associated Press on AI policies and serves as technology advisor at Health Tech Without Borders, a non-profit seeking to mitigate healthcare crises with digital tools.