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Preparing K-12 and higher education IT leaders for the exponential era

Anthropic, Teach for All Team Up for Global AI Training

The AI research company Anthropic is giving a global collective of teachers access to AI workshops, an online community forum and other resources, both to share ideas and to inform the progress of their chatbot Claude.

An Ethernet cable wrapped around a globe.
Anthropic is providing AI training and tools to 100,000 educators worldwide, the AI research company announced yesterday. Teachers working with Teach for All, a global network of education organizations including Teach for America, will have access to AI fluency workshops, an online community forum and experimentation opportunities with Anthropic’s chatbot Claude.

The community forum, called the AI Literacy and Creator Collective (LCC), also seeks feedback from participating educators to shape how Claude evolves, according to Anthropic's news release.

Resources begin with six introductory lessons on AI fluency, using Claude and applying AI in the classroom. The series was first introduced to 530 educators in November 2025.

Describing what has come out of the series so far, the news release said one teacher in Liberia attended the live trainings and built an interactive website on teaching climate change for different grade levels. Despite being new to AI, the instructor was able to incorporate Claude-based tools, apps, games and visualizations in a matter of weeks.

Similarly, a teacher in Bangladesh created a math app for sixth and seventh graders using Claude training. The app turns math learning into a game with boss battles, experience points and a leaderboard.
A screenshot of a website with a blue background. A purple title reads "Your Math Journey." Below, different levels show progress through the math learning game. Levels include "Addition Adventure Land," "Subtraction Star Valley" and "Multiplication Magic Castle."
With help from Anthropic training, a teacher in Bangladesh created a game to help middle schoolers learn math.
Anthropic
The news release said instructors in the LCC will have access to Claude Connect, an online hub connecting participants across the world and allowing them to compare notes on their progress and projects.

“The partnership has connected us with a community of organizations navigating similar technical opportunities, and there's been significant learning around responsible AI implementation,” Oscar Onuoha, IT lead at Teach for Nigeria, said in a public statement.

Educators interested in further experimentation can use Claude Lab, which gives teachers access to advanced features and monthly office hours to share feedback with the Anthropic team. According to the news release, Anthropic received over 200 applications to participate in Claude Lab within four days of announcing the program last year.

The work builds on Anthropic’s previous efforts both to provide AI training and resources to the public sector, and to gather input from on-the-ground users. Last year, Anthropic gave a discount on Claude to federal government users, pricing annual subscriptions at $1, and tapped higher education leaders to serve on an advisory board.

“For AI to reach its potential to make education more equitable, teachers need to be the ones shaping how it's used and providing input on how it's designed,” Teach for All CEO Wendy Kopp said in a public statement. “Our partnership with Anthropic is helping educators across our network experiment with and learn from these tools firsthand, as co-creators of AI's role in education.”