50 New Blog Post Ideas For Educators

Do you have a professional educator blog?

Many teachers start blogs with good intentions but keeping them active long term can be a struggle.

Sometimes the hardest part of maintaining momentum with your blog is knowing what to write about.

We’re here to help!

Throughout the year, we’ve been including blogging prompts for teachers and students in our email newsletter.

Not signed up to our email newsletter? You can add your details here and make sure you add [email protected] to your contacts to prevent the emails from going to your spam folder!

We’ve compiled these prompts into a resource for you. With 50 new blogging prompts, you should be set for many months to come!

Scroll down to find a printable PDF.

We also published 50 new prompts for students on The Edublogger last week.

Sometimes the hardest part of maintaining momentum with your blog is knowing what to write about. These 50 new blog post ideas for educators will help!

Wait! I Don’t Have A Blog!

Personal Blogging Teacher ChallengeIf creating your own blog is something that’s been on your to-do list for too long, we can help.

Earlier in the year, we updated our free, self-paced course for educators looking to get started with blogging.

There are ten steps which you can work through in a sequential order. Or you can pick and choose as you wish.

Read more about the Personal Blogging Teacher Challenge here or go straight to the course. 

The 50 Prompts For Educators

  1. Write a book review — it could be a book you’ve read for fun or learning.
  2. Make a list of 10/50/100 things you’re grateful for. Maybe you could even create a sketchnote or graphic like Dani Dipirro.
  3. Compare your first year of teaching to today. How have things changed?
  4. Share some of your favorite ways to relax and recharge outside of school hours.
  5. Embed an inspiring TED Talk and write your reflections.
  6. Share 5 myths about teaching or a topic you’re passionate about.
  7. Write about an app or web tool you use regularly or find useful.
  8. Publish a photo of when you were a student and describe this time of your life.
  9. Try Hubspot’s Blog Ideas Generator. Just enter three words and you’ll be given five ideas that you can tweak.
  10. Blog roundup. Create a list of 5 or 10 of your favorite blogs and share the reasons why you recommend them.
  11. Interview someone for a blog post. This could be a colleague, a former student, or someone from your professional learning network. Or, you could invite someone to prepare a guest post for your blog.
  12. Create an A-Z of yourself, your career, or one of your passions.
  13. Where do you connect with other teachers online? Twitter? Facebook groups? Instagram? Share your favorite ways to learn from others in the education community.
  14. Explore the website Will Robots Take My Job? Share your findings in a post.
  15. Write about the old technology you used to use at work or home that’s now obsolete. Perhaps it’s the VCR, floppy disk, or typewriter.
  16. Make a new anchor chart for your classroom and photograph it for your blog. Check out this We Are Teachers post for inspiration.
  17. When was the last time you wrote a poem? Why not give it a try in a blog post? For inspiration, Kevin Hodgson has written 3 poems about writing.
  18. Consider the popular quote doing the rounds on social media: “Do more things that make you forget to check your phone”. What does this mean to you?
  19. What do you do when you have a few minutes left at the end of a class? Share your ideas with other teachers.
  20. Flexible seating is a hot topic! Share your thoughts in a blog post or weigh up the pros and cons. Pernille Ripp’s post might provide some inspiration.
  21. Suggest some ideas for worthwhile activities at the start or end of the school year. Ten Creative Alternatives to Showing Movies Before the Break by John Spencer might provide some inspiration.
  22. Try making a meme that you could share with readers, colleagues, or perhaps your students. Check out ISTE’s post about using memes with students.
  23. There has been some online debate about having a “Pinterest perfect” classroom. What are your thoughts on this topic? Maybe you could add a touch of humor to your post like this post on Bored Teachers. 
  24. Offer some tips for new teachers. This might be general advice or specific to a certain subject or age group.
  25. Write about how you keep your passion for teaching alive. This post on Edutopia might provide some inspiration.
  26. Share a tweet, Facebook post, or Instagram post that made you reflect, laugh, or change your way of thinking.
  27. Check out the self-care calendar from Action for Happiness. Use one or more of these challenges as inspiration for a blog post.
  28. Richard Byrne has explained how to find old newspapers through Google’s Newspaper Archive. Reflect on an interesting article in a blog post.
  29. Lumen5 is a cool tool to make a video out of an article or blog post. Give it a try and share your video in a post.
  30. If you could choose any book as mandatory reading for all high school students, what would it be and why?
  31. What role do you think technology should play in the classroom? You may find inspiration from “Technology Is NOT The Focus” by Karen Arrington.
  32. What makes you happy at work? Your colleagues? Your leaders? The students? Write a post about happiness in the workplace.
  33. Larry Ferlazzo has written about the impact of making positive phone calls home. Blog about your favorite approach to parent communication.
  34. Check out these 10 productivity tips for teachers and students. Publish a post sharing your own favorite tips to get more out of your day.
  35. Read Kevin Hodgson’s post, “How Can We Tell If We Are Biased If We Already Are Biased?” Write your own reflections on this topic.
  36. Sue Waters has shared her top 100+ crime and mystery novels of all time. Choose a category of books that you enjoy and share your own top reads.
  37. How do you build relationships with students? Reflect on your approaches in a blog post. For inspiration, look at “It’s Worth The Time” by Bridget Gengler.
  38. Rich at 4 O’Clock Faculty has blogged about “do it yourself professional development“. Read the post and write about your own favorite forms of PD.
  39. Tell your readers something about your colleagues. “We All Need To Be/Have Kind Colleagues” from The Idealistic Teacher might provide some inspiration.
  40. Teachers are also students and students are also teachers. Education isn’t just one way. Write about lessons you have learned from students.
  41. Larry Ferlazzo has shared an article about using “cash” as a behavior management strategy. Share your own approaches to behavior management.
  42. David Geurin asks 5 Questions For Deeper Reflection. Use one or more of these as inspiration for a blog post.
  43. Write about your morning routine at home, work, or in the classroom.
  44. How do you find balance in your life? “Rethinking Balance” by George Couros might provide some inspiration for your own post.
  45. What do you think of grouping students by age? Check out Abe Moore’s post, “Making Sense Of Multi-Age Learning” and write your own reflections.
  46. Have you tried sketchnoting? Why not give Sylvia Duckworth’s #SketchnoteFever mini lessons a try and blog about it?
  47. Explain why you blog. What do you get out of it? Does it help refine your thinking or do you just enjoy helping others?
  48. Write about your life before teaching. What other jobs did you have? How did these experiences shape you?
  49. Try Impact Inbound’s Blog Title Generator to spark ideas for blog post titles.
  50. Check out last year’s publication with 50 more blogging prompts for teachers and see what you’ve missed!

Get Your PDF

For your convenience, we’ve assembled these prompts into a PDF that you can save to your computer, print, or share with colleagues.

Sometimes the hardest part of maintaining momentum with your blog is knowing what to write about. These 50 new blog post ideas for educators will help!

Over To You

Where do you find inspiration for your blog posts? How do you decide what to write about on your blog? Scroll down to find the comment box and let us know!

18 thoughts on “50 New Blog Post Ideas For Educators

  1. Hi Kathleen! Its me Samantha again!

    Thank you so much for all these ideas, I might show this post to my teacher! Now im over 100 posts! Thanks to you!

    Regards Samantha!

    1. Wow, 100 posts. Congratulations, Samantha. We love your enthusiasm for blogging! Keep it up.

      Best wishes,
      Kathleen

  2. Kathleen,

    Thank you for the ideas! I started my blog as a project for a masters class and I really love to write, but I’m just stuck. You have some great ideas that have made me think. For my last required post, I have to link it to ideas in technology that we’re learning in class, but after that, I’m free to write whatever I want. I’d really love to write about ditching seating charts because it has become a total game-changer for me! I want to gear my writing toward new teachers and let them know what #reallife teaching is all about and what they don’t teach you in your college courses. Thanks for the inspiration!

    Megan

    1. Hi Megan,

      Thank you so much for your thoughtful comment! I love the idea of writing about ditching seating charts. I think there are a lot of things like that that teachers continue with because they’re too busy to stop and question their practices. Hearing from others in the form of a blog post can be really powerful!

      Feel free to share your URL with us so we can share it with the Edublogs community on Twitter.

      Good luck!
      Kathleen

  3. Hi Kathleen,
    I love your Australian accent. I visited Australia about 4 years ago because my uncle and his family live over there. Beautiful place! Thank you for your blog post ideas, websites, and guided tutorial for creating an Edublogs account. I am new to blogging so it was very helpful to follow the video to make it easier for me. Thanks for your personal welcoming email and two free ebooks: Tips for teaching students how to research and Free images, copyright, and Creative Commons!

    Sincerely Tricia

    1. Hi Tricia,

      How wonderful you have visited Australia before. I hope you get back again sometime. There are so many beautiful places to explore!

      I’m so glad these ideas and the eBooks helped as well! Let’s know if you need more help in the future with blogging.

      Kathleen

  4. Hi Kathleen, thank you for awesome list of prompts, and especially with software and websites I am familiar with. I am also new to the blogging process, so getting a good start will motivate me!

  5. Thanks for the ideas, Kathleen. I am venturing into the world of blogging and I am a bit apprehensive as once I sit down to write, nothing comes to mind while everything comes to mind. This will help a great deal.

  6. Hi Kathleen! I am taking a technology course for my master’s class and one of our assignments is to learn more about teacher blogs. This post was very helpful for me to develop some ideas on how to start a blog since I have never written one myself. The ideas that you shared are great! I am very interested in the ideas that you listed about introductory blogs such as writing about myself and teaching experience or sharing tips and tricks for newer teachers. Thanks!

    1. So glad it helped, Caroline! Maybe you’ll give blogging a try yourself someday. Good luck with your studies!

  7. I think keeping up with blogging as a teacher can be exhausting. I know that I write and respond to so many email, type up lesson plans, and an infinite amount of other busy work (on top of teaching) So w/o explicit purpose it can be difficult to commit to it with any regularity.

    However, when I do write I’ve found it incredibly therapeutic, cathartic almost, as I chance to talk about my work. It’s validating to commit what you do daily to writing, and I was surprised how many anecdotal stories of success popped up – things that I was overlooking because of “bigger issues.” Yet when you slow down and blog, whether it’s with purpose from the prompts here, or a release exercise – you take the time to recognize yourself and all the great work that you do.

    It’s such a valuable activity – I’d recommend it for all teachers!

    1. Very wise words, Frank! I hope your comment encourages others to discover the joys of blogging.

      I really like this piece by Dean Shareski, “I’ve yet to hear anyone who has stuck with blogging suggest it’s been anything less than essential to their growth and improvement. I’ve no “data” to prove this but I’m willing to bet my golf clubs that teachers who blog are our best teachers.”

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