In addition, parallel sessions offered a rich array of research presentations, including Abuyog Community Collegeโ€™s representative, Alvin Advincula, who delivered his study via Zoom.

His narrative inquiry, โ€œSchool Paper Advisersโ€™ Practices in the Age of Artificial Intelligence,โ€ examined how campus journalism navigates the balance between technological efficiency and journalistic integrity, raising critical questions about whether AI serves as a tool for reinforcement or replacement, and whether reliance on digital shortcuts might compromise ethical standards.

For Abuyog Community College, Advinculaโ€™s participation marked a significant milestone, amplifying local academic voices in global discourse. In fact, his research demonstrated that grassroots scholarship can meaningfully contribute to conversations shaping mediaโ€™s future.

Ultimately, the 4th FRAMEwork Conference was more than an academic gathering; it served as a platform for reflection, recalibration, and reimagination, challenging communication practitioners to engage with AI not merely as a tool, but as a transformative force that demands responsibility, ethics, and innovation.