Good afternoon all,
Good conversation. I'm co-leading our college wide committee on AI. We've finished an Administrative Policy, Procedure and Guidelines. We have an Instructional Policy, but we are currently working on the Instructional Procedure and Guidelines (a project for next year). So my question is: are you asking about all spaces, administrative use, or instructional (faculty or student)?
Our college guidance on this in not in our Policy. But we also have a very specific governance structure Policy(what)=> Procedures(who/how)=> Guidelines(best practices/details). We say the devil is always in the Guidelines ;-) . Two items in our documentation potentially advise against using an AI meeting attendant.
1) In our guidelines document, we spell out what acceptable use looks like. For any AI note taking to used in an administrative meeting, you must gain consent from all parties in attendance. You must stop the noteaking or recording if there are sensitive topics or guests request it since sometimes you can't always anticipate where a coneration will lead.
2) Additionally, we require human in the loop. That language lives in our Procedures document.
Between those two items, I don't believe that AI administrative meeting attendance would fly at our institution. More importantly, I think we need to discuss this and possibly outline it in our instructional procedure or guideline: "An AI attendant doesn't replace student attendance in a course."
To give some background on how we arrived at this. We recently added our General Counsel to our AI governance committee. Apparently, there are a number of legal cases filed regarding the use of agentic AI. This comes down to discrimination and liability for not having a human in the loop or process (and wholesale outsourcing tasks to AI).
Hope this helps and doesn't further muddy the waters.
Sincerely,