The Specific Event
California Governor Gavin Newsom and Anthropic announced this week that Claude will become the first artificial intelligence tool made available to all state agencies and local governments in California. This is not a pilot program or a departmental experiment. It is a structural decision to embed a single AI system across an entire governmental apparatus, touching agencies with radically different operational mandates, technical capacities, and communication workflows. The scale alone makes this worth examining carefully, but the more interesting question is not whether Claude is capable. The more interesting question is whether the people using it will be.
Competence Is Not Distributed by Access
The Newsom-Anthropic deal implicitly assumes that distributing access distributes capability. This assumption is empirically wrong, and the organizational theory literature is fairly clear on why. Research on platform coordination consistently shows that workers with identical access to the same tools produce dramatically different outcomes (Kellogg, Valentine, & Christin, 2020). Access is not competence. Deployment is not adoption. The variance puzzle that appears across gig economy platforms, content creation ecosystems, and enterprise software rollouts will appear here too. Some agencies will extract genuine value from Claude. Others will use it to automate mediocrity faster.
This is not a criticism of Anthropic's technology or of Newsom's policy instincts. It is a structural observation about how competence develops in algorithmically-mediated environments. The Algorithmic Literacy Coordination framework proposes that effective platform coordination requires participants to develop an accurate structural understanding of how the system works, not merely awareness that the system exists. Hancock, Naaman, and Levy (2020) draw a related distinction in the context of AI-mediated communication: knowing that AI is involved in a process does not produce the communicative competence needed to work with that system effectively.
The Awareness-Capability Gap at Governmental Scale
Government agencies will almost certainly receive onboarding materials. There will be training sessions, perhaps mandatory ones. Employees will become aware that Claude can summarize documents, draft communications, and answer policy questions. What they will not automatically develop is the structural schema needed to understand when Claude's outputs are reliable, when they are confidently wrong, and how to calibrate task design to the system's actual capabilities rather than its perceived ones. Gagrain, Naab, and Grub (2024) describe this as the gap between algorithmic awareness and algorithmic literacy, and the gap is substantial.
The problem compounds in a governmental context because the cost of confident errors is not a viral video or a dropped conversion rate. It is a misfiled benefits claim, a misread regulatory interpretation, or a public communication that reflects a hallucination rather than a statute. The stakes of the awareness-capability gap are asymmetric in ways that private-sector deployments often are not.
Folk Theories Will Fill the Schema Vacuum
When structural training is absent or inadequate, individual users do not remain neutral. They construct folk theories: informal, impressionistic models of how the AI system works, drawn from their own trial-and-error experience and from social transmission within their workplace (Kellogg et al., 2020). Folk theories are not random. They are often locally coherent and occasionally accurate. But they do not generalize. A procurement officer in one agency who develops a reliable workaround for a particular Claude behavior will not produce knowledge that transfers cleanly to a social services caseworker in a different agency facing a structurally different task.
Gentner's (1983) structure-mapping theory predicts that transfer occurs when learners have access to an accurate relational schema, not surface-level familiarity with a specific instance. Deploying Claude across all California agencies without investing in schema induction - teaching people the structural logic of how large language models produce outputs and fail - is likely to produce a patchwork of folk theories that look like adoption but function like fragmentation.
What the Deal Actually Needs to Include
The Newsom-Anthropic agreement is described primarily in terms of access and availability. The organizational challenge it actually creates is a coordination problem: how do you ensure that tens of thousands of government workers develop not just exposure to an AI tool, but the adaptive expertise needed to use it accurately and critically across novel tasks? Hatano and Inagaki (1986) distinguish routine expertise, the ability to execute familiar procedures, from adaptive expertise, the ability to apply principled understanding to unfamiliar situations. Government work is full of unfamiliar situations. Routine expertise with Claude will not be enough.
If California's deal includes a serious investment in structural AI literacy, not just procedural onboarding, it could become a meaningful case study in how large institutions build genuine platform competence at scale. If it does not, it will be a large-scale demonstration of the awareness-capability gap that the ALC framework predicts. Either outcome is theoretically informative. Only one of them is good for California residents.
References
Gagrain, A., Naab, T. K., & Grub, J. (2024). Algorithmic media use and algorithm literacy. New Media & Society.
Gentner, D. (1983). Structure-mapping: A theoretical framework for analogy. Cognitive Science, 7(2), 155-170.
Hancock, J. T., Naaman, M., & Levy, K. (2020). AI-mediated communication: Definition, research agenda, and ethical considerations. Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication, 25(1), 89-100.
Hatano, G., & Inagaki, K. (1986). Two courses of expertise. Research and Clinical Center for Child Development Annual Report, 8, 27-36.
Kellogg, K. C., Valentine, M. A., & Christin, A. (2020). Algorithms at work: The new contested terrain of control. Academy of Management Annals, 14(1), 366-410.
Roger Hunt