Rethinking Assessment in the Age of AI

Special Series on Artificial Intelligence


Transforming Evaluation Practices with Human‑Centered Approaches
Higher education is entering a pivotal moment in which traditional assessment models built for predictable, instructor‑centered learning environments are being reshaped by artificial intelligence, rapidly evolving learner behaviours and growing demands for authentic, skills‑based evaluation.

This webinar invites educators, academic leaders, policymakers and instructional designers to critically examine how assessment can evolve to remain credible, equitable and pedagogically meaningful.

Drawing on his teaching experience across college, polytechnic and university settings, Humber Polytechnic Professor Redwan Siddiqui illustrates how AI is altering student decision‑making, expectations of feedback and the cognitive processes underlying assessment tasks. The session integrates lessons on using generative AI for assessment redesign, highlighting evidence‑based strategies to develop human‑centered evaluation frameworks. These include approaches that foreground transparency, behavioural insight and authentic performance toward more resilient, future‑ready designs.

Participants will explore how AI can strengthen rather than undermine academic assessment by enabling richer demonstrations of learning, scalable evaluation practices, and ethical, learner‑centered assessment ecosystems. Ultimately, the session reframes AI not as a threat to academic integrity, but as an opportunity to redesign assessments that are more meaningful, adaptive and aligned with the realities of today’s digital learning landscape.

Key takeaways: 

Participants will be able to:

  • Identify emerging shifts in learner behaviour driven by AI tools, and understand how these changes influence how students approach tasks, feedback and evaluation.
  • Recognize structural gaps in legacy assessment systems, and understand why higher education requires new approaches that remain credible and meaningful in AI‑supported learning environments.
  • Apply cross‑sector assessment insights drawn from teaching in college, polytechnic and university contexts, illustrating how different institutional environments shape effective evaluation design for the diverse classrooms.
  • Explore concrete assessment innovations informed by research on generative AI, including methods that enhance authenticity, transparency and meaningful performance measurement.
  • Develop a future ready perspective on human‑centered evaluation approaches that views AI not as a threat to academic integrity, but as a catalyst for pedagogical transformation and higher quality evaluation systems.

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This event is organized and managed by Contact North. You will be redirected during the registration process. If you require technical support, please communicate directly with Contact North. This webinar is offered as free additional resources. The opinions expressed in it do not necessarily reflect the views of the TLSS or the University of Ottawa.

Leading the session (in alphabetical order)

Redwan Siddiqui

Professor of Supply Chain Management
Humber Polytechnic

Redwan Siddiqui is a Professor of Supply Chain Management at Humber Polytechnic and teaches in the Operations & Decision Sciences area at Wilfrid Laurier University. His research and teaching span applied artificial intelligence, operations and supply chain management, and decision‑making. An award‑winning educator who brings practical insights into designing assessments that promote integrity, self-regulation and deeper learning, he has taught thousands of students and earned recognition for his commitment to high‑quality, inclusive, innovation‑driven instruction.

He is currently pursuing his PhD at the University of Waterloo, where his doctoral work explores behavioural decision‑making theories in the context of human–AI interactions. Before transitioning into academia, Professor Siddiqui spent more than a decade advancing operational excellence for global brands across diverse industries. In addition to his academic and industry experience, he is an active mentor with the Toronto Region Immigrant Employment Council, supporting newcomer immigrants and early‑career professionals.

Event details

Start date Thursday, April 23, 2026 - 11:00 am - 12:00 pm
Duration 60 min
Seats available 300
Organizer Contact North
Audience Professors
Language English event
Delivery mode Online via Zoom
Location Online via Zoom (Contact North Webinars)