On November 4, 2025, Anthropic announced a partnership with the Icelandic Ministry of Education and Children to provide teachers nationwide with access to Claude, along with supporting educational resources, training materials, and a support network. The official statement positions this project as "one of the world's first national-level AI education pilot programs," aiming to validate the concrete value of artificial intelligence in instructional design, lesson preparation, and assessment. The project emphasizes phased implementation, safety, and clear boundaries of responsibility; therefore, the timing of the report's release may differ from the actual pace of the pilot program's operation.
The project is being implemented by the Centre for Education and School Services (MMS) and authorized by the Ministry of Education and Children. According to publicly available information from MMS, approximately 600 teachers will initially receive trial access to two advanced AI tools (including Claude), and their application will be evaluated and capacity-building activities will be conducted within a data protection and compliance framework. Regarding long-term coverage, direct student use scenarios, and effectiveness evaluation indicators, the current focus is on "pilot exploration," and future expansion and normalization will depend on the evaluation results.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Which organization is leading this collaboration, and who will be responsible for its execution?
A: The partners are the Icelandic Ministry of Education and Children and Anthropic, and the implementing agency is the Education and School Services Centre (MMS). It is a ministry-authorized project.
Q: How large is the scale of participation?
A: MMS information shows that approximately 600 teachers participated in the first phase, covering frontline teachers in the national school system.
Q: Why is it called "one of the world's first national-level AI education pilot projects"?
A: This statement comes from an Anthropic press release and is used to describe the nature of the project; it is not a third-party ranking. It is an early-stage, nationwide, systematic pilot project.
Q: How will teachers use Claude?
A: Primarily used for course and lesson plan preparation, classroom activity design and improvement, assignments and feedback support, with accompanying training and support provided online.
Q: Do students use Claude directly?
A: Currently, the focus is on supporting teachers' work, while direct access for students and widespread use in classrooms still require pilot evaluation and policy clarification.