Report: Students Used 74 Different Ed Tech Tools in Fall 2021 Semester, Educators Used 86

LearnPlatform today released a mid-year ed tech usage report showing that K–12 students in U.S. school districts used 74 different digital learning tools during the first half of the current school year, and educators used 86.

The company’s annual “EdTech Top 40” report ranks the most-accessed digital education products, tools, and resources; the mid-year report released today includes a new analysis of ed tech usage by more than 2 million K–12 students and 225,000 teachers, between Aug. 1 and Dec. 31, 2021, LearnPlatform said.

School districts accessed an average of 1,403 ed tech products per month, about the same total reported during the 2020-21 school year, the report noted.

LearnPlatform CEO Karl Rectanus noted that having to learn how to use scores of different technology tools in the course of one school semester might seem overwhelming to the average student or teacher.

“It leads to questions about whether students and teachers benefit from this variety and whether they can easily access and be proficient on this number of tools,” he said. “While there may be no ‘right number of tools,’ everyone should want to know whether the tools they are investing in are actually leading to the desired outcomes.”

The Top Ed Tech Solutions: Highlights

Holding the top five spots on the most-often-used list are Google products, the same as last year’s report: Google Docs, Google Slides, YouTube, Google Drive, and Google Forms. Google Classroom (No. 8) and Google Sites (No. 9) fell slightly in their rankings.

Also in the Top 10 were No. 6 Kahoot, up slightly from a year ago, and Clever, up five spots, LearnPlatform said.

As expected with the widespread return to in-person learning, Zoom and Google Meet dropped significantly to No. 20 and No. 21, respectively.

Tools categorized as solutions for Classroom Engagement & Instruction comprised the largest chunk of the top 40 list. Three Classroom Engagement & Instruction products with significant increases in usage were Blooket (up 21 places to No. 15); Edpuzzle (up 8 positions to No. 25); and Prodigy (up 12 positions at No. 19).

New to the Top 40 list are learning management system Schoology (No. 22); i-Ready (No. 32), Grammarly (No. 39) and McGraw-Hill Education (No. 40).

View the full report LearnPlatform.com/top40.

About the Author

Kristal Kuykendall is editor, 1105 Media Education Group. She can be reached at [email protected].


Featured

  • laptop with digital productivity and calendar symbols

    September 2025 Tech Tactics in Education Conference Agenda Announced

    Registration is free for this fully virtual Sept. 25 event, focused on "Overcoming Roadblocks to Innovation" in K-12 and higher education.

  • stylized illustration of a desktop, laptop, tablet, and smartphone all displaying an orange AI icon

    Survey: AI Shifting from Cloud to PCs

    A recent Intel-commissioned report identifies a significant shift in AI adoption, moving away from the cloud and closer to the user. Businesses are increasingly turning to the specialized hardware of AI PCs, the survey found, recognizing their potential not just for productivity gains, but for revolutionizing IT efficiency, fortifying data security, and delivering a compelling return on investment by bringing AI capabilities directly to the edge.

  • robot brain with various technology and business icons

    Google Cloud Study: Early Agentic AI Adopters See Better ROI

    Google Cloud has released its second annual ROI of AI study, finding that 52% of enterprise organizations now deploy AI agents in production environments. The comprehensive survey of 3,466 senior leaders across 24 countries highlights the emergence of a distinct group of "agentic AI early adopters" who are achieving measurably higher returns on their AI investments.

  • file folder with glowing cloud symbol

    95% of IT Leaders Encounter Unexpected Cloud Storage Costs

    A recent report from Backblaze found nearly all large organizations face hidden cloud storage charges that limit flexibility and drive data lock-in.