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Anthropic Education the AI Fluency Index

anthropic.com

68 points by armcat a day ago · 62 comments

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mlpoknbji a day ago

> But we know that any person who uses AI is likely to improve at what they do.

Do we?

  • co_king_5 a day ago

    I would suggest that any person who uses AI will atrophy their compositional skills unless they specifically take care to preserve those skills.

    • rishabhaiover a day ago

      As a student, I constantly worry about this. But everyone in my class is producing output at a pace I can't compete with without AI assistance.

      • Avshalom a day ago

        what class are you in that "producing output at a [rapid] pace" is relevant to the grade?

        • rishabhaiover a day ago

          pick any cs class

          • Avshalom a day ago

            I have a minor in CS and no -producing the assignment by the deadline is important- grades are not based on quantity of code vs classmates.

          • rsynnott a day ago

            I mean, maybe things have changed (I finished college about 20 years ago), but I don't remember producing large volumes of stuff as being a particularly important part of a CS degree.

            • rishabhaiover a day ago

              Between a challenging job market, increasing new frontiers of learning (AI, MLops, parallel hardware) and an average mind like mine, a tool that increases throughput is likely to be adopted by masses, whether you like it or not and quality is not a concern for most, passing and getting an A is (most of my professors actively encourage to use LLMs for reports/code generation/presentations)

              • plastic-enjoyer 21 hours ago

                It will be a very interesting experiment when your generation of computer science graduates enters the job market, to put it mildly.

                • andai 4 hours ago

                  The last one already killed unique web designs, killed flash, gave us us soulless flat design and electron bloat.

                  They'll have to work pretty hard to outdo that!

                • rishabhaiover 20 hours ago

                  Individuals believe they act freely, but they are constrained and directed by historical forces beyond their awareness - Leo Tolstoy

                  • andai 4 hours ago

                    Historical forces beyond your awareness cannot force you to submit mountains of slop.

          • lawn a day ago

            That was never a worry in any of my CS classes.

      • co_king_5 21 hours ago

        My brother is a CS student and he is pretty much in the same boat.

      • theappsecguy a day ago

        Copying AI slop isn’t producing output! It’s also not conducive to learning

        • fatherwavelet 18 hours ago

          As if you are just a such a genius the models are of no use to you.

          How can you not think that makes you sound like a complete moron?

    • Insanity a day ago

      Yah and this seems to be supported by preliminary evidence on the impact of AI on things like retention and cognitive ability.

    • wasmainiac 18 hours ago

      Not even just skills, motivation too.

  • shimman 21 hours ago

    I could have sworn there was research that stated the more you use these tools the quicker your skills degrade, which honestly feels accurate to me and why I've started reading more technical books again.

    • rkomorn 21 hours ago

      > I've started reading more technical books again

      How's that working out for you in the context of working with AI tools? Do you feel like it's helping you make better use of them? Or keeping your mind sharp?

      I've been considering getting some books on core topics I haven't (re)visited in a long time to see if not having to write as much code anymore instead gives me time to (re)learn more and accelerate.

    • fatherwavelet 18 hours ago

      I just don't understand how someone can have these models at their disposal not learn anything?

      The general lack of intellectual curiosity is just mind blowing to me.

  • dsr_ a day ago

    Not until large-N research is done without sponsorship, support, or veiled threats from AI companies.

    At which point, if the evidence turns out to be negative, it will be considered invalid because no model less recent than November 2027 is worth using for anything. If the evidence turns out to be slightly positive, it will be hailed as the next educational paradigm shift and AI training will be part of unemployment settlements.

  • selridge 21 hours ago

    We DEEPLY do not.

    That's not, IMO, a "skills go down" position. It's respecting that this is a bigger maybe than anyone in living memory has encountered.

  • jimbokun 21 hours ago

    Clearly this means Anthropic believes this but would be nice to have a footnote pointing to research backing this claim.

    • amelius 20 hours ago

      It is also not very convincing considering that while the UI of Claude is not bad it is also not exactly stellar.

  • throwaw12 a day ago

    Let me add a single data point.

    > is likely to improve at what they do

    personally, my skills are not improving.

    professionally, my output is increased

    • mobattah a day ago

      My software development skillset has improved. I’m learning and stress testing new patterns that would have taken far longer pre-AI. I’m also working in new domains and tech stacks that would have taken me much longer to get up to speed on.

  • poszlem a day ago

    I would even say it's likely the opposite. My output as a programmer is now much higher than before, but I am losing my programming skills with each use of claude code.

  • j45 21 hours ago

    People who use AI mindfully and actively can possibly improve.

    The olden days of buidling skills and competencies are largely dying or dead when the skills and competencies are changing faster than skills and competency training ever intended to.

    • tovej 21 hours ago

      If things change fast, learning becomes even more important. And learning about the principles that don't change becomes most important of all.

      • j45 16 hours ago

        Yup, continuous learning, the principles that don't change are in part identified and part still coming to the forefront.

dmk a day ago

So I guess the key takeaway is basically that the better Claude gets at producing polished output, the less users bother questioning it. They found that artifact conversations have lower rates of fact-checking and reasoning challenges across the board. That's kind of an uncomfortable loop for a company selling increasingly capable models.

  • Terr_ a day ago

    > the less users bother questioning it

    This makes me think of checklists. We have decades of experience in uncountable areas showing that checklists reminding users to question the universe improve outcomes: Is the chemical mixture at the temperature indicated by the chart? Did you get confirmation from Air Traffic Control? Are you about to amputate the correct limb? Is this really the file you want to permanently erase?

    Yet our human brains are usually primed to skip steps, take shortcuts, and see what we expect rather than what's really there. It's surprisingly hard to keep doing the work both consistently and to notice deviations.

    > lower rates of fact-checking and reasoning challenges

    Now here we are with LLMs, geared to produce a flood of superficially-plausible output which strikes at our weak-point, the ability to do intentional review in a deep and sustained way. We've automated the stuff that wasn't as-hard and putting an even greater amount of pressure on the remaining bottleneck.

    Rather than the old definition involving customer interaction and ads, I fear the new "attention economy" is going to be managing the scarce resource of human inspection and validation.

    • jimbokun 21 hours ago

      Sounds like having a strong checklist of steps to take for every pull request will be crucial for creating reliable and correct software when AIs write most of the code.

      But the temptation to short change this step when it becomes the bottleneck for shipping code will become immense.

  • boplicity 21 hours ago

    > So I guess the key takeaway is basically that the better Claude gets at producing polished output, the less users bother questioning it.

    This is exactly what I worry about when I use AI tools to generate code. Even if I check it, and it seems to work, it's easy to think, "oh, I'm done." However, I'll (often) later find obvious logical errors that make all of the code suspect. I don't bother, most of the time though.

    I'm starting to group code in my head by code I've thoroughly thought about, and "suspect" code that, while it seems to work, is inherently not trustworthy.

  • Florin_Andrei a day ago

    I think we're still at the stage where model performance largely depends on:

    - how many data sources it has access to

    - the quality of your prompts

    So, if prompting quality decreases, so does model performance.

    • dmk a day ago

      Sure, but the study is saying something slightly different, it's not that people write bad prompts for artifacts, they actually write better ones (more specific, more examples, clearer goals,...). They just stop evaluating the result. So the input quality goes up but the quality control goes down.

    • jimbokun 21 hours ago

      Seems like it’s impossible for output to be good if the prompt is bad. Unless the AI is ignoring the literal instructions and just guessing “what you really want” which would be bad in a different way.

      • AnIrishDuck 20 hours ago

        > On two occasions I have been asked, — "Pray, Mr. Babbage, if you put into the machine wrong figures, will the right answers come out?" In one case a member of the Upper, and in the other a member of the Lower, House put this question. I am not able rightly to apprehend the kind of confusion of ideas that could provoke such a question.

        - Charles Babbage, https://archive.org/details/passagesfromlife03char/page/67/m...

        EDIT: This is a new iteration of an old problem. Even GIGO [1] arguably predates computers and describes a lot of systemic problems. It does seem a lot more difficult to distinguish between a "garbage" or "good" prompt though. Perhaps this problem is just going to keep getting harder.

        1. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garbage_in,_garbage_out

    • candiddevmike a day ago

      What does prompting quality even mean, empirically? I feel like the LLM providers could/should provide prompt scoring as some kind of metric and provide hints to users on ways they can improve (possibly including ways the LLM is specifically trained to act for a given prompt).

      • dsr_ a day ago

        That would be a quality metric, and right now they are focused on quantity metrics.

rickydroll 4 hours ago

While AI fluency is an important question to ask, affordability is another. Can a low-income person use AI to the same level of fluency as a high-income person? Will fluency become another force for income inequality?

kseniamorph a day ago

I feel like the authors make a logical inconsistency. They present the drop in "identify missing context" behavior in artifact conversations as potentially concerning, like people are thinking less critically. But their own data suggests a simpler explanation: artifact conversations show higher rates of upfront specification (clarifying goals +14.7pp, specifying format +14.5pp, providing examples +13.4pp). It's obvious that when you provide more context upfront, you end up with less missing context later. I'd be more sceptical about such research.

bargainbin a day ago

I’m not alone in finding this against the claims of the product right?

Claude is meant to be so clever it can replace all white collar work in the next n-years, but also “you’re not using it right?” Which one is it?

  • dsr_ a day ago

    Which one will convince you to buy more Claude? Please answer honestly, it's for the sake of profits.

  • rsynnott a day ago

    Anthropic in particular seem to be in a weird place where on the one hand they fund some real research, which is often not all roses and sunshine for them, but on the other hand, like all AI companies, they feel the need to make absurdly over-the-top claims about what's coming up Real Soon Now(TM).

  • jimbokun 21 hours ago

    Anthropic is a weird company where the CEO almost admits at times they are probably building the Torment Nexus, yet still feel they need to do it anyway…because someone else might do it first?

  • SpicyLemonZest a day ago

    I'm not quite convinced of the maximalist claims, but these two aren't incompatible. Every time we talk about a company being "mismanaged" by e.g. a private equity buyout, what we mean is that the owners had access to a large volume of high quality white collar work but couldn't figure out how to use it right.

lukev 21 hours ago

This is a highly circular method of evaluation. It correlates "fluency behaviors" with longer conversations and more back and forth.

What it notably does not correlate any of these these behaviors with is external value or utility.

It is entirely possible that those people who are getting the most value out of LLMs are the ones with shorter interactions, and that those who engage in lengthier interactions are distracting themselves, wasting time, or chasing rabbit trails (the equivalent of falling in a wiki-hole, at the most charitable.)

I can't prove that either -- but this data doesn't weigh in one way or the other. It only confirms that people who are chatty with their LLMs are chatty with their LLMs.

In my own case, I find the longer I "chat" with the LLM the more likely I am to end up with a false belief, a bad strategy, or some other rabbit hole. 90% of the value (in my personal experience) is in the initial prompt, perhaps with 1-2 clarifying follow-ups.

zahlman 19 hours ago

> In line with our recent Economic Index, we find that the most common expression of AI fluency is augmentative—treating AI as a thought partner, rather than delegating work entirely. In fact, these conversations exhibit more than double the number of AI fluency behaviors than quick, back-and-forth chats.

> But we also find that when AI produces artifacts—including apps, code, documents, or interactive tools—users are less likely to question its reasoning (-3.1 percentage points) or identify missing context (-5.2pp). This aligns with related patterns we observed in our recent study on coding skills.

Well, sure. If you're asking the AI to produce artifacts directly, it's likely because you pre-judged yourself less competent to do that kind of analysis.

Kye a day ago

You could arrive at the essence of this by just having read and internalized Carl Sagan's The Demon-Haunted World. Especially the Baloney Detection Kit.

In my experience good prompting is mostly just good thinking.

  • esafak a day ago

    And having the experience and judgment to ask the right thing.

    • selridge 21 hours ago

      And being willing to be wrong and to be misled; finding ways to contain that or build forcing functions against it.

      In a strange way that's exciting, because it forces me to learn. And sometimes forces me to confront whether stuff I had was domain knowledge or portable as experience.

bigstrat2003 a day ago

To the extent that this should be a thing, there are very few people I would want doing it less than the company who has repeatedly been caught lying about its product's achievements. Anthropic should not be taken seriously after their track record.

sarkarghya a day ago

Honestly to use llms properly all you need to know is that it’s a next word (or action) prediction model and like all models increased entropy hurts it. Try to reduce entropy to get better results. Rest is just sugarcoated nonsense. To use llms properly you need a physics class.

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