Plenary Sessions

Opening Plenary

Undisciplined: How Great Teaching Breaks the Rules and Re-Enchants the Classroom

Friday, June 5 | 5:15 - 6:30 pm

Student disengagement is often treated as a problem to be solved with better tools, tighter policies, or trendy techniques. This plenary argues the opposite: the antidote to disengagement is not innovation at the level of technique, but transformation at the level of being. By drawing a clear distinction between performance and presence, Michael Wesch shows how our fixation on performance—shaped by fear, scripting, self-protection, and the desire to be liked—quietly drains the life from our classrooms and from ourselves. Presence, by contrast, is responsive, relational, and alive in the moment—it is risky, cannot be faked, and is precisely what students recognize when learning becomes real.

Drawing on decades of award-winning teaching and ethnographic fieldwork from campfires in the rainforests of New Guinea to temples in India, Vietnam, and Korea, Wesch shows how great teaching has always resembled a campfire: a shared space of curiosity, honesty, and meaning-making. This plenary reclaims “the great thing” at the heart of every discipline—the big human questions and hard-earned insights that first drew us into our fields—as the center of transformative teaching.

Attendees will be invited to confront the barriers to presence, reconnect with their real why, and rediscover the joy of intellectual life and teaching. Emphasizing how preparation and passion outside the classroom translate into presence within it, this talk offers a manifesto for the re-enchantment of the academy and a call to become “undisciplined” in service of what matters most.

Michael Wesch headshot

Michael Wesch, PhD

Closing Plenary

AI Literacy and Liberal Education

Sunday, June 7 | 11:30 am - 12:45 pm

Artificial intelligence is transforming how we work, write, and think—perhaps faster than any change in human history. For educators, this disruption brings both challenge and opportunity. As AI reshapes what “average” work looks like, it opens the door to raising academic standards and reaffirming the central values of liberal education.

In this plenary, Bowen reframes AI literacy as a distinctly educational mission rooted in two staples of higher learning: asking sharper questions and critically evaluating answers. Reframing AI literacy in this way leads to a plethora of new assignments where educators can teach both writing and critical thinking while using AI in a way that raises standards rather than replacing human agency.

Together, we will explore how faculty across disciplines can position themselves and their students as “AI bosses”—directing, interrogating, and refining AI output rather than passively accepting it. Attendees will leave with practical ideas for assignments and teaching strategies that embrace AI’s potential while reinforcing the habits of mind that define higher education: curiosity, reflection, creativity, and rigor.

Jose Antonio Bowen headshot

José Antonio Bowen, PhD, FRSA

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