What It Is
EdTechMeme is the daily intelligence layer for education technology. Each day, it synthesizes signals from dozens of sources — trade press, policy outlets, research institutions, and the major platform vendors — into a clear view of what moved the market and why it matters.
The centerpiece is a daily intelligence brief: an AI-assisted synthesis that identifies the dominant signal across all coverage, explains the implications for enterprise technology leaders and institutional decision-makers, and names what to watch in the week ahead. Below it, related stories are clustered so you see how coverage is converging — or diverging — on the same event.
This is not a roundup. It's an interpretation.
What We Cover
How It Works
Dozens of feeds — publications, research organizations, policy outlets, and platform blogs — are checked every six hours. Incoming articles are deduplicated, clustered by story using AI, and surfaced with related coverage grouped together. The daily intelligence brief is generated each morning using Claude, anchored to that day's articles, and written to a specific editorial stance: skeptical of hype, specific about signals, clear on what enterprise technology leaders should watch.
The Week provides a rolling seven-day archive organized by category — useful for catching up or tracking how a story developed. Every Friday, the Weekly Brief goes to subscribers: the week's top signal in each category, synthesized to a clear bottom line.
Who It's For
EdTechMeme is built for enterprise technology leaders and education market decision-makers — product teams at the major platform vendors, edtech investors, district and institutional technology officers, and policy analysts who need to track the market, not just the headlines. If you're responsible for strategy in education technology, this is your daily read.
Sources
EdTechMeme draws from dozens of tracked feeds including EdSurge, Education Week, The Hechinger Report, Inside Higher Ed, K-12 Dive, EdTech Magazine, Educause, Stanford HAI, Christensen Institute, Brighteye Insider, the Microsoft Education Blog, Google for Education, and dozens of independent researchers, think tanks, and policy outlets. View the full source list →
Get in Touch
To suggest a source, report an issue, or ask about EdTechMeme, reach us at hello@edtechmeme.com.
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