Education
How University Students Use Claude \ Anthropic
AI systems are no longer just specialized research tools: they’re everyday academic companions. As AIs integrate more deeply into educational environments, we need to consider important questions about learning, assessment, and skill development. Until now, most discussions have relied on surveys and controlled experiments rather than direct evidence of how students naturally integrate AI into their academic work in real settings.
To address this gap, we’ve conducted one of the first large-scale studies of real-world AI usage patterns in higher education, analyzing one million anonymized student conversations on Claude.ai.
The key findings from our Education Report are:
- STEM students are early adopters of AI tools like Claude, with Computer Science students particularly overrepresented (accounting for 36.8% of students’ conversations while comprising only 5.4% of U.S. degrees). In contrast, Business, Health, and Humanities students show lower adoption rates relative to their enrollment numbers.
- We identified four patterns by which students interact with AI, each of which were present in our data at approximately equal rates (each 23-29% of conversations): Direct Problem Solving, Direct Output Creation, Collaborative Problem Solving, and Collaborative Output Creation.
- Students primarily use AI systems for creating (using information to learn something new) and analyzing (taking apart the known and identifying relationships), such as creating coding projects or analyzing law concepts. This aligns with higher-order cognitive functions on Bloom’s Taxonomy. This raises questions about ensuring students don’t offload critical cognitive tasks to AI systems.
Identifying educational AI usage
When researching how people use AI models, protecting user privacy is paramount. For this project, we used Claude Insights and Observations, or “Clio,” our automated analysis tool that provides insights into how people are using Claude. Clio enables bottom-up discovery of AI usage patterns by distilling user conversations into high-level usage summaries, such as “troubleshoot code” or “explain economic concepts.” Clio uses a multi-layered, automated process that removes private user information from conversations. We built this process so it minimizes the information that passes from one layer to the next. We describe Clio’s privacy-first design in this earlier blog.
We used Clio to analyze approximately one million anonymized1 conversations from Claude.ai Free and Pro accounts tied to higher education email addresses.2 We then filtered these conversations for student and academic relevance—such as whether the conversation pertained to coursework or academic research—which yielded 574,740 conversations.3 Clio then grouped these conversations to derive aggregate education-related insights: how different academic subjects were represented; how students-AI interaction differed; and the types of cognitive tasks that students delegate to AI systems.
What are students using AI for?
We found that students primarily use Claude to create and improve educational content across disciplines (39.3% of conversations). This often entailed designing practice questions, editing essays, or summarizing academic material. Students also frequently used Claude to provide technical explanations or solutions for academic assignments (33.5%)—working with AI to debug and fix errors in coding assignments, implement programming algorithms and data structures, and explain or solve mathematical problems. Some of this usage might also be cheating, which we discuss below. A smaller but still sizable portion of student usage was to analyze and visualize data (11.0%), support research design and tool development (6.5%), create technical diagrams (3.2%), and translate or proofread content between languages (2.4%).
Below is a more detailed breakdown of common requests across subjects.
AI usage across academic disciplines
We next examined which subjects showed disproportionate use of Claude. We did so by comparing Claude.ai usage patterns with the number of U.S. bachelor’s degrees awarded.4 The most disproportionately heavy use of Claude was in Computer Science: despite representing only 5.4% of U.S. bachelor’s degrees, Computer Science accounted for 38.6% of conversations on Claude.ai (this might reflect Claude’s particular strengths in computer coding). Natural Sciences and Mathematics also show higher representation in Claude.ai relative to student enrollment (15.2% vs. 9.2%, respectively).
Conversely, Business-related educational conversations accounted for just 8.9% of conversations despite constituting 18.6% of bachelor’s degrees, showing a disproportionately low use of Claude. Health Professions (5.5% vs. 13.1%) and Humanities (6.4% vs. 12.5%) were also less represented relative to student enrollment in these disciplines.
These patterns suggest that STEM students, particularly those in Computer Science, may be earlier adopters of Claude for educational purposes, while students in Business, Health, and Humanities disciplines may be integrating these tools more slowly into their academic workflows. This may reflect higher awareness of Claude in Computer Science communities, as well as AI systems’ greater proficiency at tasks performed by STEM students relative to those performed by students in other disciplines.

How students interact with AI
There are many ways of interacting with AI, and they’ll affect the learning process differently. In our analysis of how students interact with AI, we identified four distinct patterns of interaction, which we categorized along two different axes, as shown in the figure below.
The first axis was “mode of interaction”. This could involve:5 (1) Direct conversations, where the user is looking to resolve their query as quickly as possible, and (2) Collaborative conversations, where the user actively seeks to engage in dialogue with the model to achieve their goals. The second axis was the “desired outcome” of the interaction. This could involve: (1) Problem Solving, where the user seeks solutions or explanations to questions, and (2) Output Creation, where the user seeks to produce longer outputs like presentations or essays. Combining the two axes gives us the four patterns presented below.

These four interaction styles were represented at similar rates (each between 23% and 29% of conversations), showing the range of uses students have for AI. Whereas traditional web search typically only supports direct answers, AI systems enable a much wider variety of interactions, and with them, new educational opportunities. Some selected positive learning examples include:
- Explain and clarify philosophical concepts and theories
- Create comprehensive chemistry educational resources and study materials
- Explain muscle anatomy, physiology, and function concepts for academic assignments
At the same time, AI systems present new challenges. A common question is: “how much are students using AI to cheat?” That’s hard to answer, especially as we don’t know the specific educational context where each of Claude’s responses is being used. For instance, a Direct Problem Solving conversation could be for cheating on a take-home exam… or for a student checking their work on a practice test. A Direct Output Creation conversation could be for creating an essay from scratch… or for creating summaries of knowledge for additional research. Whether a Collaborative conversation constitutes cheating may also depend on specific course policies.
That said, nearly half (~47%) of student-AI conversations were Direct—that is, seeking answers or content with minimal engagement. Whereas many of these serve legitimate learning purposes (like asking conceptual questions or generating study guides), we did find concerning Direct conversation examples including:
- Provide answers to machine learning multiple-choice questions
- Provide direct answers to English language test questions
- Rewrite marketing and business texts to avoid plagiarism detection
These raise important questions about academic integrity, the development of critical thinking skills, and how to best assess student learning. Even Collaborative conversations can have questionable learning outcomes. For example, “solve probability and statistics homework problems with explanations,” might involve multiple conversational turns between AI and student, but still offloads significant thinking to the AI. We will continue to study these interactions and try to better discern which ones contribute to learning and develop critical thinking.
Subject-specific AI usage patterns
Students across disciplines engage with AI in different manners:
- Natural Sciences & Mathematics conversations tended toward Problem Solving, such as “solve specific probability problems with step-by-step calculations” and “solve academic homework or exam problems with step-by-step explanations.”
- Computer Science, Engineering, and Natural Sciences & Mathematics leaned towards Collaborative conversations, whereas Humanities, Business, and Health were more evenly split stronger between Collaborative and Direct conversations.
- Education showed the strongest preference for Output Creation, covering 74.4% of conversations. However, this usage might stem from imperfections in our filtering methods. Many of these conversations involved “creat[ing] comprehensive teaching materials and educational resources” and “creat[ing] detailed lesson plans,” indicating that teachers are also using Claude for educational support. In total, Education made up 3.8% of all conversations.
This suggests that educational approaches to AI integration would likely benefit from being discipline-specific. Our data are a first step in helping recognize the variations in how students across subjects engage with AI.

Cognitive tasks students delegate to AI
We also explored how students delegate cognitive responsibilities to AI systems. We used Bloom’s Taxonomy,6 a hierarchical framework used in education to classify cognitive processes from simpler to more complex. While the framework was initially intended for student thinking, we adapted it to analyze Claude’s responses when conversing with a student.
We saw an inverted pattern of Bloom’s Taxonomy domains exhibited by the AI:
- Claude was primarily completing higher-order cognitive functions, with Creating (39.8%) and Analyzing (30.2%) being the most common operations from Bloom’s Taxonomy.
- Lower-order cognitive tasks were less prevalent: Applying (10.9%), Understanding (10.0%), and Remembering (1.8%).
This distribution also varied by interaction style. As expected, Output Creation tasks, such as generating summaries of academic text or feedback on essays, involved more Creating functions. Problem Solving tasks, such as solving calculus problems or explaining programming fundamentals, involved more Analyzing functions.
The fact that AI systems exhibit these skills does not preclude students from also engaging in the skills themselves—for example, co-creating a project together or using AI-generated code to analyze a dataset in another context—but it does point to the potential concerns of students outsourcing cognitive abilities to AI. There are legitimate worries that AI systems may provide a crutch for students, stifling the development of foundational skills needed to support higher-order thinking. An inverted pyramid, after all, can topple over.
Limitations
Our research is grounded in real-world data. That has many advantages in terms of the validity of our findings and their application to educational contexts. However, it also comes with limitations that might affect the scope of our findings:
- Our dataset likely captures early adopters, and might not represent the broader student population;
- It’s unclear how representative Claude use is relative to overall AI usage in education—many students use AI tools beyond Claude.ai, meaning that we present only a partial view of their overall AI engagement patterns;
- There are likely both false positives and false negatives in how conversations were classified. We relied on conversations from accounts tied to higher education email addresses: some of these that were considered to be student-related by our classifier may actually be from staff or faculty members. Furthermore, other student conversations are likely on accounts tied to non-university email addresses;
- Due to privacy considerations, we only analyze Claude.ai usage within a single 18-day retention window. Students’ usage likely differs across the year as their educational commitments fluctuate;
- We only study what tasks students delegate to AI, not how they ultimately use AI outputs in their academic work or whether these conversations effectively support learning outcomes;
- The categorization of student-AI conversations into academic disciplines may not fully capture interdisciplinary work where AI usage patterns may differ significantly;
- Applying Bloom’s Taxonomy to the cognitive processes of an AI, as opposed to a student, is imperfect. Skills like Remembering are harder to quantify in the context of AI systems.
Institutional policies regarding AI use in education vary widely, and might significantly impact the patterns we observe in ways we cannot measure within this dataset.
Conclusions and looking ahead
Our analysis provides a bird’s-eye view of where and how students are using AI in the real world. We recognize that we are only at the beginning of understanding AI’s impact on education.
We’ve seen in our discussions with students and educators that AI can empower learning in remarkable ways. For example, AI has been used to support a student’s nuclear fusion reactor project, and to facilitate better communication between students and teachers in classrooms.
But we are under no illusions that these initial findings entirely address the profound changes happening in education. AI is making educators’ lives more challenging in all kinds of ways, and this research doesn’t fully capture them. As students delegate higher-order cognitive tasks to AI systems, fundamental questions arise: How do we ensure students still develop foundational cognitive and meta-cognitive skills? How do we redefine assessment and cheating policies in an AI-enabled world? What does meaningful learning look like if AI systems can near-instantly generate polished essays, or rapidly solve complex problems that would take a person many hours of work? As model capabilities grow and AI becomes more integrated into our lives, will everything from homework design to assessment methods fundamentally shift?
These findings contribute to the ongoing discussions amongst educators, administrators, and policymakers about how we can ensure AI deepens, rather than undermines, learning. Further research will help us better understand how both students and teachers use AI, the connections to learning outcomes, and the long-term implications for the future of education.
Anthropic’s approach to education
In addition to this Education Report, we are partnering with universities to better understand the role of AI in education. As an early step, we are experimenting with a Learning Mode that emphasizes the Socratic method and conceptual understanding over direct answers. We look forward to collaborating with universities on future research studies and more directly studying the effects that AI has on learning.
Bibtex
If you’d like to cite this post, you can use the following Bibtex key:
@online{handa2025education,
author = {Kunal Handa and Drew Bent and Alex Tamkin and Miles McCain and Esin Durmus and Michael Stern and Mike Schiraldi and Saffron Huang and Stuart Ritchie and Steven Syverud and Kamya Jagadish and Margaret Vo and Matt Bell and Deep Ganguli},
title = {Anthropic Education Report: How University Students Use Claude},
date = {2025-04-08},
year = {2025},
url = {https://www.anthropic.com/news/anthropic-education-report-how-university-students-use-claude},
}
Acknowledgements
Kunal Handa* and Drew Bent* designed and executed the experiments, made the figures, and wrote the blog post. Alex Tamkin proposed initial experiments and provided detailed direction and feedback. Miles McCain iterated on the technical infrastructure necessary for all experiments. Esin Durmus, Michael Stern, Mike Schiraldi, Saffron Huang, Stuart Ritchie, Steven Syverud, and Kamya Jagadish provided valuable feedback and discussion. Margaret Vo, Matt Bell, and Deep Ganguli provided detailed guidance, organizational support, and feedback throughout.
Additionally, we appreciate helpful discussion and comments from Rose E. Wang, Laurence Holt, Michael Trucano, Ben Kornell, Patrick Methvin, Alexis Ross, and Joseph Feller.
Education
Labour must keep EHCPs in Send system, says education committee chair | Special educational needs
Downing Street should commit to education, health and care plans (EHCPs) to keep the trust of families who have children with special educational needs, the Labour MP who chairs the education select committee has said.
A letter to the Guardian on Monday, signed by dozens of special needs and disability charities and campaigners, warned against government changes to the Send system that would restrict or abolish EHCPs. More than 600,000 children and young people rely on EHCPs for individual support in England.
Helen Hayes, who chairs the cross-party Commons education select committee, said mistrust among many families with Send children was so apparent that ministers should commit to keeping EHCPs.
“I think at this stage that would be the right thing to do,” she told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme. “We have been looking, as the education select committee, at the Send system for the last several months. We have heard extensive evidence from parents, from organisations that represent parents, from professionals and from others who are deeply involved in the system, which is failing so many children and families at the moment.
“One of the consequences of that failure is that parents really have so little trust and confidence in the Send system at the moment. And the government should take that very seriously as it charts a way forward for reform.
“It must be undertaking reform and setting out new proposals in a way that helps to build the trust and confidence of parents and which doesn’t make parents feel even more fearful than they do already about their children’s future.”
She added: “At the moment, we have a system where all of the accountability is loaded on to the statutory part of the process, the EHCP system, and I think it is understandable that many parents would feel very, very fearful when the government won’t confirm absolutely that EHCPs and all of the accountabilities that surround them will remain in place.”
The letter published in the Guardian is evidence of growing public concern, despite reassurances from the education secretary, Bridget Phillipson, that no decisions have yet been taken about the fate of EHCPs.
Labour MPs who spoke to the Guardian are worried ministers are unable to explain key details of the special educational needs shake-up being considered in the schools white paper to be published in October.
Stephen Morgan, a junior education minister, reiterated Phillipson’s refusal to say whether the white paper would include plans to change or abolish EHCPs, telling Sky News he could not “get into the mechanics” of the changes for now.
However, he said change was needed: “We inherited a Send system which was broken. The previous government described it as lose, lose, lose, and I want to make sure that children get the right support where they need it, across the country.”
Hayes reiterated this wider point, saying: “It is absolutely clear to us on the select committee that we have a system which is broken. It is failing families, and the government will be wanting to look at how that system can be made to work better.
“But I think they have to take this issue of the lack of trust and confidence, the fear that parents have, and the impact that it has on the daily lives of families. This is an everyday lived reality if you are battling a system that is failing your child, and the EHCPs provide statutory certainty for some parents. It isn’t a perfect system … but it does provide important statutory protection and accountability.”
Education
The Trump administration pushed out a university president – its latest bid to close the American mind | Robert Reich
Under pressure from the Trump administration, the University of Virginia’s president of nearly seven years, James Ryan, stepped down on Friday, declaring that while he was committed to the university and inclined to fight, he could not in good conscience push back just to save his job.
The Department of Justice demanded that Ryan resign in order to resolve an investigation into whether UVA had sufficiently complied with Donald Trump’s orders banning diversity, equity and inclusion.
UVA dissolved its DEI office in March, though Trump’s lackeys claim the university didn’t go far enough in rooting out DEI.
This is the first time the Trump regime has pushed for the resignation of a university official. It’s unlikely to be the last.
On Monday, the Trump regime said Harvard University had violated federal civil rights law over the treatment of Jewish students on campus.
On Tuesday, the regime released $175m in previously frozen federal funding to the University of Pennsylvania, after the school agreed to bar transgender athletes from women’s teams and delete the swimmer Lia Thomas’s records.
Let’s be clear: DEI, antisemitism, and transgender athletes are not the real reasons for these attacks on higher education. They’re excuses to give the Trump regime power over America’s colleges and universities.
Why do Trump and his lackeys want this power?
They’re following Hungarian president Viktor Orbán’s playbook for creating an “illiberal democracy” – an authoritarian state masquerading as a democracy. The playbook goes like this:
First, take over military and intelligence operations by purging career officers and substituting ones personally loyal to you. Check.
Next, intimidate legislators by warning that if they don’t bend to your wishes, you’ll run loyalists against them. (Make sure they also worry about what your violent supporters could do to them and their families.) Check.
Next, subdue the courts by ignoring or threatening to ignore court rulings you disagree with. Check in process.
Then focus on independent sources of information. Sue media that publish critical stories and block their access to news conferences and interviews. Check.
Then go after the universities.
Crapping on higher education is also good politics, as demonstrated by the congresswoman Elise Stefanik (Harvard 2006) who browbeat the presidents of Harvard, University of Pennsylvania and MIT over their responses to student protests against Israel’s bombardment of Gaza, leading to several of them being fired.
It’s good politics, because many of the 60% of adult Americans who lack college degrees are stuck in lousy jobs. Many resent the college-educated, who lord it over them economically and culturally.
But behind this cultural populism lies a deeper anti-intellectual, anti-Enlightenment ideology closer to fascism than authoritarianism.
JD Vance (Yale Law 2013) has called university professors “the enemy” and suggested using Orbán’s method for ending “leftwing domination” of universities. Vance laid it all out on CBS’s Face the Nation on 19 May 2024:
Universities are controlled by leftwing foundations. They’re not controlled by the American taxpayer and yet the American taxpayer is sending hundreds of billions of dollars to these universities every single year.
I’m not endorsing every single thing that Viktor Orbán has ever done [but] I do think that he’s made some smart decisions there that we could learn from.
His way has to be the model for us: not to eliminate universities, but to give them a choice between survival or taking a much less biased approach to teaching. [The government should be] aggressively reforming institutions … in a way to where they’re much more open to conservative ideas.”
Yet what, exactly, constitutes a “conservative idea?” That dictatorship is preferable to democracy? That white Christian nationalism is better than tolerance and openness? That social Darwinism is superior to human decency?
The claim that higher education must be more open to such “conservative ideas” is dangerous drivel.
So what’s the real, underlying reason for the Trump regime’s attack on education?
Not incidentally, that attack extends to grade school. Trump’s education department announced on Tuesday it’s withholding $6.8bn in funding for schools, and Trump has promised to dismantle the department.
Why? Because the greatest obstacle to dictatorship is an educated populace. Ignorance is the handmaiden of tyranny.
That’s why enslavers prohibited enslaved people from learning to read. Fascists burn books. Tyrants close universities.
In their quest to destroy democracy, Trump, Vance and their cronies are intent on shutting the American mind.
-
Robert Reich, a former US secretary of labor, is a professor of public policy emeritus at the University of California, Berkeley. He is a Guardian US columnist. His newsletter is at robertreich.substack.com
Education
Minister won’t rule out support cuts for children with EHCPs amid Send overhaul – UK politics live – UK politics live | Politics
Minister won’t rule out support cuts for children with EHCPs amid Send overhaul
Good morning. Less than a week after the government had to abandon the main pillar of its welfare reform plans 90 minutes before a vote it was otherwise likely to lose, the government is now facing another revolt over plans to scale back support available to disabled people. But this row affects children, not adults – specifically pupils with special educational needs who have education, health and care plans (EHCPs) that guarantee them extra help in schools.
As Richard Adams and Kiran Stacey report, although the plans have not been announced yet, campaigners are alarmed by reports that access to EHCPs is set to be restricted.
The Times has splashed on the same issue.
The Times quotes an unnamed senior Labour MP saying: “If they thought taking money away from disabled adults was bad, watch what happens when they try the same with disabled kids.”
Stephen Morgan, the early education minister, was giving interviews this morning. He was supposed to be talking about the government’s Giving Every Child the Best Start in Life strategy being announced today, but instead he mostly took questions on EHCPs.
On Times Radio, asked if he could guarantee that every child who currently has an EHCP would continue to keep the same provisions, Morgan would not confirm that. Instead he replied:
We absolutely want to make sure that we deliver better support for vulnerable children and their parents and we’re committed to absolutely getting that right. So it’s a real priority for us.
When it was put to him that he was not saying yes, he replied:
Well of course we want to make sure that every child gets the support that they need. That’s why we’re doing the wider reform and we’re publishing the white paper later this year.
Here is the agenda for the day.
Morning: Nigel Farage attends a meeting of Kent county council where his party, Reform UK, is in power.
11.30am: Downing Street holds a lobby briefing.
11.30am: Keir Starmer and other leaders attend a memorial service at St Paul’s Cathedral in London to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the 7/7 attacks.
2.30pm: Yvette Cooper, the home secretary, takes questions in the Commons.
If you want to contact me, please post a message below the line when comments are open (normally between 10am and 3pm at the moment), or message me on social media. I can’t read all the messages BTL, but if you put “Andrew” in a message aimed at me, I am more likely to see it because I search for posts containing that word.
If you want to flag something up urgently, it is best to use social media. You can reach me on Bluesky at @andrewsparrowgdn.bsky.social. The Guardian has given up posting from its official accounts on X, but individual Guardian journalists are there, I still have my account, and if you message me there at @AndrewSparrow, I will see it and respond if necessary.
I find it very helpful when readers point out mistakes, even minor typos. No error is too small to correct. And I find your questions very interesting too. I can’t promise to reply to them all, but I will try to reply to as many as I can, either BTL or sometimes in the blog.
Key events
Unison and Usdaw join other unions in urging Labour to consider introducing wealth tax
As Peter Walker reports, Neil Kinnock, the former Labour leader, said the government should consider a wealth tax, in an interview with Sky News.
Today the Daily Telegraph has splashed on the proposal.
In their story, Ben Riley-Smith, Dominic Penna and Hannah Boland quote five trade unions also supporting a wealth tax.
Some of them them are leftwing unions long associated with calls for wealth taxes. Unite told the paper it had “led the campaign for a wealth tax inside and outside the Labour party”. Steve Wright, general secretary of the FBU, told the paper that “introducing a wealth tax to fund public services, a generous welfare state, and workers’ pay must be a priority in the second year of a Labour government. And Matt Wrack, the former FBU general secretary who is now acting general secretary of Nasuwt, called for an “immediate introduction of a wealth tax”, which he said had “very significant public support”.
But two unions seen as less militant and more aligned with the Labour leadership (which is wary of ‘tax the rich’ rhetoric) have backed the idea. Christina McAnea, general secretary of Unison, told the Telegraph: “A wealth tax would be a much fairer way of raising revenue to invest in public services and grow the economy.”
And Paddy Lillis, the general secretary of Usdaw, said: “We know wealth in this country is with a small number of people. [A wealth tax] is one way of raising money quickly.”
Government plans to overhaul Send provision will be about ‘strengthening’ the system, minister says
Stephen Morgan, the early education minister, told LBC that the government proposals to overhaul special educational needs and disabilities (Send) provision would be about “strengthening” the system.
Asked if he could say parents of children with Send had nothing to fear from the plans, which are due to be announced in the autumn, Morgan replied:
Absolutely. What we want to do is make sure we’ve got a better system in place as a result of the reform that we’re doing that improves outcomes for children with additional needs.
But, asked if the plans would involve scrapping ECHPs, Morgan replied:
We’re looking at all things in the round. I’m not going to get into the mechanics today, but this is about strengthening support for the system.
Here is the letter to the Guardian, signed by dozens of special needs and disability charities and campaigners, that is covered in our splash story about opposition to proposals to restrict access to education, health and care plans (EHCPs). (See 9.34am.)
Here is John Harris’s column on the topic.
And here is an extract.
Since Labour won the election, rising noise has been coming from Whitehall and beyond about drastically restricting the legal rights to dedicated provision that underpin the education of hundreds of thousands of children and young people. Those rights are enforced by the official Send tribunal, and embodied in education, health and care plans (EHCPs), which set out children’s needs and the provision they entail in a legally binding document. Contrary to what you read in certain news outlets, they are not any kind of “golden ticket”: parents and carers used to unreturned phone calls and long waits still frequently have to fight their local councils for the help their plans set out. But – and as a special needs parent, I speak from experience – they usually allow stressed-out families to just about sleep at night.
For about 40 years, such rights have been a cornerstone of the Send system. But their future is now uncertain: councils, in particular, are frantically lobbying ministers to get parents and their pesky rights out of the way. Late last year, a government source quoted in the Financial Times held out the prospect of “thousands fewer pupils” having access to rights-based provision. Despite the fact that EHCPs are most sorely needed in mainstream schools, a senior adviser to the Department for Education recently said that a consideration of whether EHCPs should no longer apply to children in exactly those settings is “the conversation we’re in the middle of”. There are whispers about families who currently have EHCPs being allowed to keep them, while in the future, kids with similar needs would be waved away, something that threatens a stereotypical two-tier model, another element with worrying echoes of the benefits disaster.
Consumer confidence rising, survey suggests
The majority of UK households are feeling financially secure, with 70% of people confident enough to plan a summer holiday, according to a survey. PA Media reports:
The number of people feeling financially secure has risen this quarter by three percentage points to 58%, while confidence that the UK economy is improving has risen to 17% from one in 10 three months ago, the KPMG Consumer Pulse poll found.
The survey of 3,000 UK adults, taken in early June, found 50% feel able to spend freely, although 14% say they are still having to actively cut their discretionary spending to pay for essentials, and 3% of are incurring debt to do so …
Despite the quarterly improvement in economic confidence, half of people (51%) feel that the economy is still worsening – although this is down from 58% in the previous quarter.
Those saying that the economy is getting worse cite the cost of their groceries (79%), utilities (74%), and the general state of public services where they live (42%).
Linda Ellett, head of consumer, retail and leisure at KPMG UK, said: “Consumer confidence has rallied over the last quarter and only a fifth of consumers now feel insecure about their financial circumstance. Businesses will be hoping that this improvement brings about increased spending confidence during the summer months.
“But macroeconomic confidence still looms large, with half of consumers still to be convinced that the economy isn’t worsening.”
Minister won’t rule out support cuts for children with EHCPs amid Send overhaul
Good morning. Less than a week after the government had to abandon the main pillar of its welfare reform plans 90 minutes before a vote it was otherwise likely to lose, the government is now facing another revolt over plans to scale back support available to disabled people. But this row affects children, not adults – specifically pupils with special educational needs who have education, health and care plans (EHCPs) that guarantee them extra help in schools.
As Richard Adams and Kiran Stacey report, although the plans have not been announced yet, campaigners are alarmed by reports that access to EHCPs is set to be restricted.
The Times has splashed on the same issue.
The Times quotes an unnamed senior Labour MP saying: “If they thought taking money away from disabled adults was bad, watch what happens when they try the same with disabled kids.”
Stephen Morgan, the early education minister, was giving interviews this morning. He was supposed to be talking about the government’s Giving Every Child the Best Start in Life strategy being announced today, but instead he mostly took questions on EHCPs.
On Times Radio, asked if he could guarantee that every child who currently has an EHCP would continue to keep the same provisions, Morgan would not confirm that. Instead he replied:
We absolutely want to make sure that we deliver better support for vulnerable children and their parents and we’re committed to absolutely getting that right. So it’s a real priority for us.
When it was put to him that he was not saying yes, he replied:
Well of course we want to make sure that every child gets the support that they need. That’s why we’re doing the wider reform and we’re publishing the white paper later this year.
Here is the agenda for the day.
Morning: Nigel Farage attends a meeting of Kent county council where his party, Reform UK, is in power.
11.30am: Downing Street holds a lobby briefing.
11.30am: Keir Starmer and other leaders attend a memorial service at St Paul’s Cathedral in London to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the 7/7 attacks.
2.30pm: Yvette Cooper, the home secretary, takes questions in the Commons.
If you want to contact me, please post a message below the line when comments are open (normally between 10am and 3pm at the moment), or message me on social media. I can’t read all the messages BTL, but if you put “Andrew” in a message aimed at me, I am more likely to see it because I search for posts containing that word.
If you want to flag something up urgently, it is best to use social media. You can reach me on Bluesky at @andrewsparrowgdn.bsky.social. The Guardian has given up posting from its official accounts on X, but individual Guardian journalists are there, I still have my account, and if you message me there at @AndrewSparrow, I will see it and respond if necessary.
I find it very helpful when readers point out mistakes, even minor typos. No error is too small to correct. And I find your questions very interesting too. I can’t promise to reply to them all, but I will try to reply to as many as I can, either BTL or sometimes in the blog.
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