UK Launches Free AI Training for Every Adult in the Country
The UK is throwing the doors open to AI training.
In what is being described as the most significant upskilling push since the birth of the Open University in the 1970s, the UK government has officially opened the doors to free artificial intelligence training for every adult in the country.
Announced this week, the program aims to prepare 10 million workers for a shifting labor market by the end of the decade.
The Department for Science, Innovation and Technology (DSIT) is spearheading this massive expansion, targeting nearly a third of the British workforce. The goal is to make the UK the fastest AI adopter in the G7, a move the government believes could unlock up to £140 billion in annual economic output.
To reach this scale, the government has enlisted tech industry leaders. Giants like Google, Microsoft, Amazon, and IBM are partnering with public sector heavyweights, including the NHS, to roll out training that ranges from 20-minute bite-sized lessons to deep-dive sessions lasting several hours.
“We want AI to work for Britain, and that means ensuring Britons can work with AI. Change is inevitable, but the consequences of change are not,” said Liz Kendall, Secretary of State for Science, Innovation and Technology, in the announcement.
“We will protect people from the risks of AI while ensuring everyone can share in its benefits. That starts with giving people the skills and confidence they need to seize the opportunities AI brings, putting the power and control into their hands,” she added.
Closing the confidence gap
The courses are hosted on the AI Skills Hub, where users can earn a “virtual AI foundations badge” upon completion. These modules aren’t just for coding wizards; they focus on practical workplace tasks such as drafting emails, automating admin, and creating content.
While the tech sounds futuristic, the current reality is more grounded. Research cited by the government shows that only 21% of UK workers feel confident using AI, and small businesses are significantly lagging behind larger corporations in adoption.
The strategy at a glance:
- Target: 10 million workers by 2030 (including 2 million SME employees)
- Funding: £27 million for the “TechLocal” scheme to create 1,000 community tech jobs
- Scholarships: Up to 100 Spärck AI Scholarships for Master’s students across nine universities
- New oversight: The launch of the “AI and the Future of Work Unit” to monitor economic impacts and protect worker rights
Critics call for more than ‘prompting’
Despite the enthusiasm, some experts warn that short courses might only scratch the surface. The Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR) cautioned that “prompting a chatbot” isn’t a silver bullet for career longevity.
As Roa Powell, senior research fellow at the IPPR, told the BBC: “Skills for the age of AI can’t be reduced to short technical courses alone. Workers also need support to build judgement, critical thinking, physical skills, leadership and the confidence to use these tools safely.”
Furthermore, the industry body for IT, BCS, noted that while worker training is great, company directors also need to be schooled. Sharron Gunn, head of BCS, told the BBC that there needs to be a “far greater understanding of technology at board level” to ensure executive decisions about AI are properly scrutinized.
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