Fall Working Connections 2024 will feature two tracks held virtually each week:
- AWS Academy Cloud Developing
- AI Foundations
Click to view the track details and policies.
Registration has closed.
Fall Working Connections 2024 will feature two tracks held virtually each week:
Click to view the track details and policies.
The AWS Academy Cloud Developing course is designed to help students gain technical expertise in development with cloud technologies. The curriculum is delivered through instructor-led or digital lectures, demos, activities, knowledge checks, and hands-on labs. Throughout the course, students will explore a scenario that provides opportunities to build a variety of infrastructures through a guided, hands-on approach. Students have access to lecture materials, online knowledge checks, and hands-on labs.
This course helps you to prepare for the AWS Certified Developer Associate Exam and Certification.
Students are advised, but not required, to have completed the AWS Academy Cloud Foundations course, and/or have already obtained the AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner Certification before this course.
Students are advised, but not required, to have completed the AWS Academy Cloud Architecting course, and/or have already obtained the AWS Certified Solutions Architect Associate Certification before this course.
None required. (Some recommendations will be made during the course for future reference).
Participants will need access to an internet connection to connect via Zoom or WebEX for the duration of the sessions. Participants will be created and provided access to the AWS Academy course in the Canvas Platform.
Please note that content is subject to change or modification based on the unique needs of the track participants in attendance.
Mr. Asad Ahmad Khan, MSIT is a Full Time Lecturer of Information Technology at Georgia Gwinnett College, part of the University System of Georgia. He is the former Program Director of the Networking Specialist program and Dean Liaison in the Computer Sciences Division at Gwinnett Technical College, where he served for almost 3 years in these roles, until July 2024. He currently teaches as a Part Time Faculty of Computer Sciences and AWS at Gwinnett Tech still. He has built and taught four different AWS courses for Gwinnett Tech, as an AWS Accredited Educator. He has taught AWS certification prep courses to students from across Georgia’s technical college system, state employees across Georgia’s state agencies, and instructors in the CCN for the last four years. He managed the AWS, CompTIA, and Microsoft Learn Academies for the college as well. He currently possesses 31 certificates in IT, including 16 in Cloud Computing (AWS, Azure, Google Cloud, CompTIA, and Oracle Cloud).
This immersive workshop explores the rapidly evolving fields of Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Machine Learning (ML), equipping educators with the knowledge and skills to integrate these technologies into your curriculum and prepare students for emerging industry demands. We will cover data preparation, classification algorithms, deep learning, image processing, and natural language processing. We will discuss the AI project lifecycle, from problem formulation to deployment Additionally, the course will provide a thorough overview of essential Python operations, making it accessible even to those without prior programming knowledge. Several AI tools will be introduced, including ChatGPT, Midjourney, Copilot, Claude, and many others.
None
Please note that content is subject to change or modification based on the unique needs of the track participants in attendance.
Wade Huber is a residential computer science faculty member at Chandler-Gilbert Community College, where he recently served on the committee developing CGCC’s Artificial Intelligence bachelor’s degree. He has over 25 years of experience as a software engineer in the telecom, semiconductor, and medical device manufacturing industries. During this time, he taught math and computer science as an adjunct professor. He holds a Bachelor of Science from Trinity University in San Antonio, TX, and a Master of Science in Computer Science from The University of Texas at Dallas.
The goal of the National IT Innovation Center’s (NITIC) online Working Connections professional development is to provide IT faculty attendees with the expertise needed to teach their track content in a subsequent semester, bringing the most current information to their classrooms either as a stand-alone course or as supplemental information to an existing course.
If you must cancel your registration, please notify Mark Dempsey at mdempsey@collin.edu immediately. The last day to make any registration change (request to change tracks or cancel) is Friday, September 27.
Because it is a priority of NSF grant funding that all available seats are filled, attendees who register but then fail to show up without providing advance notice may not be eligible for future Working Connections events. Please let us know right away if you’re not able to attend.
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