Ed Tech Digest archive shows decades of classroom focus

The Ed Tech Digest archive page lists hundreds of categories and a long, month-by-month run from February 2007 through June 2026, reflecting how classroom practice, learning games, reading, research studies, and school reform have been tracked over time.
On the Ed Tech Digest homepage, the first thing you notice isn’t a headline about a single new policy or a groundbreaking classroom pilot. It’s the sheer weight of where the page has been—an index of categories and an archive that stretches back month by month for years.
The site groups its posts into topic lanes that read like a map of what teachers and students keep coming back to: classroom practice. learning games. reading. research studies. school closures. school reform. teacher resources. video. technology. and AI. Alongside those recurring pillars sit smaller. specific threads—bilingual and Intermediate English. ESL Web and ESL Carnival. grammar and vocabulary. SEL Update. listening. math. social studies. geography. and dictionaries.
In the background, the archive tells its own story of endurance. A reader can select a month, and the page records how many posts were published then. The list runs through June 2026 (93), May 2026 (98), April 2026 (100), March 2026 (105), February 2026 (98), and January 2026 (108). It continues backward through December 2025 (108), November 2025 (106), October 2025 (98), September 2025 (105), August 2025 (98), July 2025 (96), June 2025 (99), May 2025 (98), April 2025 (94), March 2025 (96), February 2025 (90), and January 2025 (111).
The archive doesn’t slow down as it moves into earlier years. It lists December 2024 (103) through January 2024 (106). and then drops into 2023 with November 2023 (95). October 2023 (110). September 2023 (89). August 2023 (101). July 2023 (106). June 2023 (105). May 2023 (115). April 2023 (96). March 2023 (105). February 2023 (90). and January 2023 (100). The same pattern continues through 2022—December 2022 (95). November 2022 (97). October 2022 (106). September 2022 (101). August 2022 (117). July 2022 (102). June 2022 (105). May 2022 (121). April 2022 (108). March 2022 (147). February 2022 (116). and January 2022 (145)—then 2021. 2020. and further back.
Even in years where some months look quieter, the archive remains there, counted. It reaches back through 2019 (with January 2019 at 197 and December 2019 at 156), 2018 (January 2018 at 200, December 2018 at 189), and earlier still. By the time it gets to early records—like February 2007 (3) and March 2007 (37)—the page still assigns a specific number to each month.
Tucked near the archive controls are the category counts that suggest what kinds of classroom ideas have drawn the most attention over time. Posts labeled “video” are listed with 3,846 entries. “teacher resources” appears with 5,281. “social studies” shows 6,294. “instruction” is tracked at 773, while “learning games” is 879 and “reading” is 824. “research studies” is listed at 1,274, and “school closures” at 780.
The categories also show how the site has tracked the evolution of education technology as its own conversation. “web 2.0” appears with 2,369, “technology” with 681, “AI” with 498, and “artificial intelligence” with 26. There’s a separate lane for “ed tech digest” itself (550). and a section for “Ed Week Teacher” (2. 406). indicating the archive isn’t just storing teaching materials—it’s also organizing references to teacher-facing discussions.
The page also includes browsing entry points that feel like daily habits rather than broad research: “most popular posts” (615). “monthly updated lists” (382). “monthly best lists” (205). “top ten list” (244). and “search engines” (107). Even small counts—like “humor” (3) or “lessons” (4)—appear alongside broader topics such as “school reform” (2. 891). “teacher resources” (5. 281). and “technology” (681). reinforcing that the archive is built for scanning and returning. not just reading once.
Taken together, the archive and its category index don’t point to a single moment of change. They show a long-running effort to document classroom practice and educational trends at a granular. month-by-month pace—while keeping education technology topics—AI. video. Web 2.0—within reach of core teaching areas like reading. math. listening. writing. grammar. and SEL.
For anyone following MISRYOUM Education News-style coverage—where schools and learning tools are constantly evolving—the page’s most striking detail may be the quiet permanence of the archive itself: the ability to go back to February 2007 (3 posts) and then jump forward through every month up to June 2026 (93 posts). with the same categories still standing alongside the latest entries.
Ed Tech Digest education technology classroom practice learning games reading research studies school reform school closures AI artificial intelligence SEL Update teacher resources web 2.0 video social studies
Wow so it’s like a giant list of school stuff? Teachers already drowning tho.
Not gonna lie, I only clicked because “AI” is in the categories. Why is that even mixed in with reading and dictionaries? Feels like they’re trying to replace teachers.
Wait so it says Feb 2007 to June 2026?? That’s a lot of months lol. I’m confused though—like does it mean they posted 105 in March 2026 or what. Also school closures being a category like… that’s just depressing.
This is kinda pointless? Like “endurance” archive of posts doesn’t mean anything changed. And I swear these sites always say reform, reform, reform and then nothing happens in my district anyway. Also learning games sounds good but half the time they’re blocked by IT.