AI Ethics and Innovation in Nursing Education at UW–Oshkosh

UW–Oshkosh AI Trailblazers Spotlight Ethical, Program-Aligned AI Adoption at National Conferences

UW–Oshkosh’s early, ethical, and intentional approach to artificial intelligence is earning national recognition, as faculty and staff leaders shared the university’s work at two premier higher-education conferences in fall 2025.

AI Trailblazers Initiative

Through UW–Oshkosh’s established AI Trailblazers initiative, teams represented the university at the EDUCAUSE Annual Conference and AACN Transform, the national meeting of the American Association of Colleges of Nursing (AACN), demonstrating how responsible, values-driven AI adoption can strengthen teaching, learning, and student success.

EDUCAUSE Annual Conference

At the 2025 EDUCAUSE Annual Conference (online), UW–Oshkosh presented Grounded Innovation: How a Framework & Philosophy Statement Drive Ethical AI Use in Classrooms. This session was competitively selected through a national proposal process and highlighted the university’s AI Framework and Philosophy—developed proactively ahead of UW System policy—as a practical model for guiding classroom use of AI.

Presenters included:

  • Terese Blakeslee, PhD, RN (Associate Professor)
  • Becca McLagan, MS.Ed
  • Kim Brundidge, MSN, RN, CCRN (IAS & DNP-FNP student)
  • Nahal Rahmanpanah, DNP, APRN, FNP-C (Assistant Professor)

The presentation emphasized cross-functional collaboration, particularly between nursing faculty and instructional technology leaders, and showed how institutional values can translate into clear, actionable guidance for instructors and students.

“Our goal has never solely been to adopt AI quickly, but to also adopt it well,” said Seon Yoon Chung, PhD, RN, CHSE-A, Dean and Professor of the College of Nursing, Health Professions, and STEM at UW–Oshkosh. “By grounding our work in shared principles and program outcomes, we’ve been able to support faculty innovation while maintaining trust, transparency, and academic integrity. Earning opportunities to share our work in front of national peer audiences is a real validation of where we are going at UWO.”

AACN Transform 2025

That momentum continued at AACN Transform 2025 in Anaheim, California, where UW–Oshkosh was invited to deliver a featured two-hour block titled Faculty and Student Journeys: AI Integration in Nursing Education. This invitation allowed the team to combine three proposed sessions into a single, end-to-end narrative illustrating a deliberately backwards-designed approach to AI integration.

Presenters included:

  • Erika Janssen, PhD, MSN, RN (Assistant Professor)
  • Lindsay Morgan, DNP, MSN-NE, APNP, FNP-BC (Associate Professor)
  • Becca McLagan
  • Kim Brundidge
  • Nahal Rahmanpanah

The presentation traced UW–Oshkosh’s work from foundational guidance—such as the AI Framework and Philosophy, syllabus statements, and student waiver language—through research efforts, including a published scoping review of AI-powered simulation and an AI perspectives survey. It concluded with implementation examples featuring AI-powered avatar simulations in nursing education.

“Our experience shows that governance, research, and instructional practice don’t have to compete with one another,” Chung said. “When they are aligned, they create space for innovation that is ethical, scalable, and truly centered on student learning.”

National Recognition

The response from national peers underscored the growing impact of UW–Oshkosh’s AI Trailblazers initiative. Dr. Patricia Morton, editor of The Journal of Professional Nursing, offered to mentor the team in developing publications based on this work, and representatives from the University of Michigan sought guidance on launching their own AI avatar simulations and related research collaborations.

Together, the EDUCAUSE and AACN presentations reinforce UW–Oshkosh’s reputation as a thoughtful early adopter of artificial intelligence—one that prioritizes ethical use, program alignment, and collaboration across disciplines. What began as internal pilots through the AI Trailblazers has evolved into nationally recognized work, now poised to expand and further strengthen UW–Oshkosh’s leadership in responsible AI innovation.

“I’m proud of how well we represented UW–Oshkosh on the national stage,” said Becca McLagan, a member of the AI Trailblazers group and teaching, learning, and technology specialist in the UW–Oshkosh College of Nursing, Health Professions, and STEM. “The support we’ve received has allowed this work to grow from internal pilots into nationally recognized efforts. These initiatives are now positioned to scale, and I’m excited about what this means for our programs and for UW–Oshkosh’s continued leadership in responsible AI innovation.”

Study nursing at UW–Oshkosh.

More Insights

Revolutionizing Drone Regulations: The EU AI Act Explained

The EU AI Act represents a significant regulatory framework that aims to address the challenges posed by artificial intelligence technologies in various sectors, including the burgeoning field of...

Revolutionizing Drone Regulations: The EU AI Act Explained

The EU AI Act represents a significant regulatory framework that aims to address the challenges posed by artificial intelligence technologies in various sectors, including the burgeoning field of...

Embracing Responsible AI to Mitigate Legal Risks

Businesses must prioritize responsible AI as a frontline defense against legal, financial, and reputational risks, particularly in understanding data lineage. Ignoring these responsibilities could...

AI Governance: Addressing the Shadow IT Challenge

AI tools are rapidly transforming workplace operations, but much of their adoption is happening without proper oversight, leading to the rise of shadow AI as a security concern. Organizations need to...

EU Delays AI Act Implementation to 2027 Amid Industry Pressure

The EU plans to delay the enforcement of high-risk duties in the AI Act until late 2027, allowing companies more time to comply with the regulations. However, this move has drawn criticism from rights...

White House Challenges GAIN AI Act Amid Nvidia Export Controversy

The White House is pushing back against the bipartisan GAIN AI Act, which aims to prioritize U.S. companies in acquiring advanced AI chips. This resistance reflects a strategic decision to maintain...

Experts Warn of EU AI Act’s Impact on Medtech Innovation

Experts at the 2025 European Digital Technology and Software conference expressed concerns that the EU AI Act could hinder the launch of new medtech products in the European market. They emphasized...

Ethical AI: Transforming Compliance into Innovation

Enterprises are racing to innovate with artificial intelligence, often without the proper compliance measures in place. By embedding privacy and ethics into the development lifecycle, organizations...

AI Hiring Compliance Risks Uncovered

Artificial intelligence is reshaping recruitment, with the percentage of HR leaders using generative AI increasing from 19% to 61% between 2023 and 2025. However, this efficiency comes with legal...