Here is a sample subscription for you. Click here to start your FREE subscription
- June’s “Best” Lists – There Are Now 2,595 Of Them!
- Pins Of The Week
- 2026’s Best Artificial Intelligence Tools & Resources For Teachers & Students – Part One
- Useful Lessons For Teaching About Native American Boarding Schools
- 2026’s Best Posts On New Education-Related Research Studies – So Far
- More Recent Articles

I’m fairly active on Pinterest and, in fact, have curated 25,000 resources there that I haven’t shared on this blog.
I thought readers might find it useful if I began sharing a handful of my most recent “pins” each week (I’m not sure if you can see them through an RSS Reader – you might have to click through to the original post).
Here they are:
I’ve published many AI-related “Best” lists, and you can find them all here.
Here are my choices for the best AI tools and resources for education over the past six months:
“My AI Toolkit: Studio” Is An Exceptional Resource For ELL Teachers
“Twin Pics” Looks Like A Good Classroom Game To Support ELL Writing
“How to Use Artificial Intelligence With English Learners—According to Teachers”
Inductive Teaching Has Always Been An Effective Strategy, Perhaps Even More So In The AI Era
Google Translate’s “Practice” Feature Finally Makes Itself A Useful Tool For Language Learning – It Now Assesses Your Pronunciation!
What Do You Think Of These Two Questions For Helping Guide School AI Use?
This Idea Of Beginning Lessons With A “Micro-Inquiry” Is A Good One, & I Like This Free AI Tool Designed To Create Them
Note To College Instructors: Um, I Don’t Think Your Students Are Reading Your Textbook Or Materials
“The Claim Auditor” Uses AI To Verify…Claims That People Say Are Research-Based
“Quizdes” Is A Free & Decent Alternative To Wayground Or Kahoot – If You Needed One
“What If History” Is A Fun AI Tool & Also Makes Me Feel Sad About What AI Has Done To Classrooms
“Dulink” Translates Any Article AND They Make It Look Nice
“Write In English” Is A New & Free AI Tool I Created That Is A Rough Approximation Of Something That Could Be Very Effective In Helping ELLs
Google Translate Now Offers Simultaneous Translation On iPhones Using Headphones – This Will Be Great For ELL Students In English-Proficient Classes
How Did I Not Know About YouTube’s “Ask About This Video” Feature? It Can Be An Excellent Tool For ELLs
“Speak Free” Is A Decent – & Free – Tool for Practicing English Pronunciation
This Is Interesting: Foundations Putting A Bunch Of Money Into Creating AI Tools For English Language Learners
In Many Ways, I Think “ESLvideo” May Now Be One Of The Best Examples For AI Education Use On The Web
The Best Resources For Teachers, Especially Those Teaching ELLs, To Learn About Google’s NotebookLM
“Spot Different” Could Come In Very Handy For ELL Teachers
“Instrument Playground” Would Be A Good Tool For Students Learn About Different Musical…Instruments
“Padlet Arcade” Looks Like A Great – &, For Now At Least, Free – Place To Easily Create Online Learning Games
Who’d Have Thought? Students Who Prompt AI To Create Texts They’re Interested In Are More Likely To Want To Read Them
I’ve Created Five Free Chatbots For Teachers & Others, And Some Have Become Quite Popular – Here Links To All Of Them
Google Uses Its AI To Create Its Most Elaborate Relatively Useless Tool Yet
Google Just Created A New AI Tool That Is Perfect For Teachers Of ELL Newcomers
“Vocab.top” Seems Like A Particularly Good Multilingual Dictionary
“My Story Steps” Has Potential For Long-Distance Grandparents Like Me
“Odyssey” Is An AI-Powered Video Tool That Could Be Useful To English Language Learners
“LineSpeak” Is An AI Tool To Assess Pronunciation & It Seems To Have A Generous Free Plan
“Uttered” Might Become A Decent Video Option For English Language Learners
Some Studies Say That AI Tutors Are Supposedly Effective, But For Whom?
If I Was Still Teaching, I’d Use This Writing Prompt As Part Of My Unit On Artificial Intelligence
I Benefited A Lot From Reading This Piece About AI In Education, & I Think All Educators Could, Too
“LangTwo” Seems Like A Decent AI-Powered Language Tool & It’s Free (For Now, At Least)
“Spelly” Looks Like A Good Free Tool Where ELLs Can Get Their Pronunciation Assessed
“New Life” Seems To Do An Excellent Job Of Comparing What Life Is Like In Two Different Places
Five AI-Created Infographics Sharing Info On AI Research & My Recommendations
Excellent Summary Of Research On AI & Learning, But Recommendations Are Pretty Weak
“Hidden Door” Uses AI To Let You Role-Play Within Classic Novels
I’m Pretty Surprised That Sal Khan Wrote This Op Ed, & Even More Surprised The NY Times Published It
“Mock Talk” Looks Like A Good – And Free – Tool Where ELLs Can Practice Speaking
The Most Useful Free Or VERY Low Cost AI Tools For Supporting English Language Learners
With “Learn Everything,” Google Strikes Out Again In Trying To Make AI Useful
“Talk To Dai” Seems Like A Decent AI-Powered Language Learning Tool, & It’s Free (At Least, For Now)
I REALLY Think Secondary ELL Teachers Should Consider Radically Restructuring Classes, But I’m Not Sure If They Are
“Hello Nabu” Looks Like One Of The Best Free AI-Powered Language Learning Tools That I’ve Seen So Far
Google Unveils “Scholar Labs” For Academic Research – Seems “Meh”
Though I think the author here is kidding himself with some of the assignments he suggests are AI-resistant, there are a few that could be useful. I’m adding it to The “Best” Strategies For Creating AI-Resistant Assignments.
Writing builds resilience by changing your brain, helping you face everyday challenges is from The Conversation. I’m adding it to THE BEST RESOURCES FOR HELPING STUDENTS SEE THE BENEFITS OF WRITING (IN THE AI AGE).
Parents Fell in Love With Alpha School’s Promise. Then They Wanted Out is from Wired.
AI-generated lesson plans fall short on inspiring students and promoting critical thinking is from The Conversation.
EduGems has a nice collection of prompts that teachers can use with AI chatbots. I’m adding it to NOT NECESSARILY THE “BEST,” BUT A LIST OF AI TEACHER PREP SITES.

Another day, another mid-year “Best” list.
Now, it’s time for research studies.
You can see all previous editions of this list, as well as all my ed research related “best” lists, here.
Here are my choices for the past six months:
Study Identified A Long Overlooked Aspect Of Student Achievement – The Impact Of Student Mobility
No Sh_T Sherlock, Another Study Finds That Just Because Your Students Do Well At Advantaged School Doesn’t Mean You’ll Have The Same Success At A Low-Income One
Yet Another Study Finds Reasons To Be Very Cautious When Using Value Added Measurements To Evaluate Teachers
More Research Shows What Most Educators Know: Teachers Get Better As They Gain More Experience
Here’s A List Of “Interactive Teaching Methods” A New Study Has Found Effective In Social Studies Classes
This Is Pretty Interesting: Meta-Analyses Ranking Instructional Math Strategies
Every ELL Teacher In The U.S. Will Want To Read These Results From An Ed Week Survey On Teaching English Learners
Yet Another Study Finds This Program Is Successful For Ninth-Graders – I’m Not Really Sure Why Most Schools Don’t Implement It
New Study Finds That Peer & Self Assessment Helps Create The Conditions For Student Motivation
Big New Analysis Of What Works In Reading Instruction For Older Readers – Here’s What It Says
“The Claim Auditor” Uses AI To Verify…Claims That People Say Are Research-Based
New Study Confirms What Most Teachers Know – Having A Sense Of Humor Helps Big-Time In The Classroom
Even MORE Research Finding That Reclassifying ELLs Isn’t The Preferred Goal That It’s Cracked Up To Be
This Is A VERY Interesting & Useful Study On The Use Of Collaborative Writing In An ELL Classroom AND I Think It’s Findings Can Be Applicable With English-Proficient Students, Too
Are State English Tests For ELLs Like WIDA & ELPAC Actually Valid? For What It’s Worth, Here’s What Google Gemini & ChatGPT Say
This Research About Teacher/Student Misalignment Is From Ghana, But I Think It Also Holds True In The U.S.
Who’d Have Thought? Students Who Prompt AI To Create Texts They’re Interested In Are More Likely To Want To Read Them
Study Finds That Speaking An Additional Language Can Keep You Healthier Physically
Online Game Leaderboards & Zero Sum Thinking
Shocking (NOT) Research Result – SEL Can’t Mitigate The Affects Of Poverty On Academic Achievement
New Study Suggests The Main Reason Students May Find Math – Or Any Other Subject – Challenging Is Because They Don’t Know How To Handle Mistakes
New Study Finds Learning Another Language Slows Down Ageing Of Your Brain
Recommendations For Teachers From A Study On How To Enhance Student Motivation
Survey Finds Parents/Guardians More Likely To Respond To Messages About Absences Early In AM Or Later Afternoon
Some Studies Say That AI Tutors Are Supposedly Effective, But For Whom?
New Study Reinforces Key Strategy For Identifying Leaders
How Many Teachers Leave The Profession Within Their First Five Years?
Excellent Summary Of Research On AI & Learning, But Recommendations Are Pretty Weak
Study Finds, To No One’s Surprise, That Well-Designed Peer Assessment Can Be Effective
Small Slights Matter – This Workplace Research Has SO Much Relevance To The Classroom
Genes Are Not THE Predeterminant To How Smart You Are
No Shocker To Teachers, But New Study Finds SEL Helps Students’ Academic Achievement
Research Finds That Employers Are Looking For People With Social Skills – I’d Show Students This Article If I Was Still In Classroom
Study Basically Reinforces Idea That Students Will Learn More With Active Learning
Statistic Of The Day: Fewer People Want To Be Teachers
New Study Finds ICE Raids Are Hurting Lots Of Students, ‘Regardless Of … Immigration Status’
More Recent Articles