Most "best EdTech tools" lists are identical. The same ten tools appear on every roundup — tools designed for general education, with ESL mentioned as a supported use case somewhere in the feature documentation. Best EdTech tools for ESL students means something different: tools selected and evaluated specifically for English learner needs, across the instructional categories that matter most for ESL programs.
This guide organizes EdTech by category and applies an ESL-specific evaluation lens to each recommendation. Tools that are good for general education but require significant workarounds for ESL students are marked accordingly. Tools designed specifically for English learners are highlighted where they exist — they're rarer than the market suggests.
What Makes EdTech Truly ESL-Appropriate
Before the list — a framework for evaluation. Any EdTech tool you adopt for ESL students should answer yes to most of these criteria:
- Language complexity adapts to ELP level — not just grade level. A 5th grader at WIDA Level 1 should not receive the same language demands as a 5th grader at Level 4.
- Native-language support beyond Spanish — if your students speak Vietnamese, Arabic, Somali, or Haitian Creole, "Spanish support" is not multilingual support.
- Scaffolding, not translation — tools that bypass English language development by allowing students to work entirely in their home language slow acquisition rather than supporting it.
- ELP-aligned data — usage reports that connect to WIDA or state ELP assessment domains, not just time-on-task or accuracy percentages.
- Accommodation support — explicit features for ESOL/IEP/504 students, not just general accessibility settings.
With that framework, here are the best EdTech tools for ESL students organized by instructional category.
The only AI tutoring platform in this category built specifically for ESL instruction. Kuliso presents academic content in English with native-language scaffolding across 20+ languages — not translation, but instructional support that makes English content comprehensible while building English academic vocabulary. WIDA-aligned proficiency levels, explicit IEP/504/ESOL accommodation support, and pricing starting at $8–30/student/year (compatible with Title III funding).
Kuliso's vocabulary instruction is particularly strong for ESL contexts — see the math vocabulary in Spanish, math vocabulary in Arabic, and math vocabulary in Vietnamese pages for examples of the bilingual academic vocabulary approach. For language-specific AI tutoring, see Spanish tutoring, Arabic tutoring, and Haitian Creole tutoring.
Excellent AI tutor for ESL students who have reached WIDA Level 3+ (Developing or above). The Socratic method requires students to read and produce English at conversational fluency — Level 1–2 students will struggle. Free and widely accessible. Best used as a supplement for intermediate-advanced ELL students rather than as the primary platform for beginning ESL learners.
Kuliso: Purpose-built AI tutoring for ESL students
20+ languages, WIDA-aligned, IEP/504 accommodation support. See pricing for your school or district — Title III eligible.
View Pricing → Try the Demo →Built into Microsoft 365 (Word, Teams, OneNote, Edge), Immersive Reader provides text-to-speech in natural voices, syllable highlighting, line focus, picture dictionary, and translation in 100+ languages. The most immediately useful free tool for ELL students accessing English texts. Integrates with the Microsoft tools most districts already use. Important limitation: it's an accessibility tool, not an instructional one — it makes text accessible but doesn't build academic language skills.
Newsela provides current-events articles leveled from grade 2 to grade 12 on the same topic, with Spanish-language versions for most articles. The ESL strength: teachers can assign the same current-events topic to the whole class at different reading levels, enabling whole-class discussion regardless of reading proficiency level. Built-in quizzes and annotation support discussion and comprehension checks. Limitation: Spanish-only for second language; limited relevance for non-Spanish-speaking ELL students.
Math instruction presents a particular challenge for ESL students: mathematical concepts and mathematical language are separate acquisition challenges. A student who understands fractions conceptually may not yet have the English vocabulary to explain fraction operations. Kuliso addresses this specifically — math practice includes bilingual vocabulary support for mathematical terms, calibrated to the student's language proficiency level. See the math vocabulary pages for examples of this approach across languages.
Strong adaptive math for K–8 with Spanish navigation support. The adaptive engine is excellent. ESL limitation: Spanish-only, and language scaffolding doesn't adapt to WIDA proficiency level. Useful for Spanish-speaking ELL students in math; not appropriate as a primary ESL math tool for other language groups.
Duolingo is a language acquisition tool — it teaches English directly, through structured exposure and gamified practice. This makes it useful for students at WIDA Levels 1–2 who need foundational English vocabulary and basic sentence structures. Important distinction: it teaches English language skills, it doesn't support learning academic content through English. Use it for dedicated ELD time, not content instruction. High engagement; students will use it voluntarily.
Not an instructional tool — a state-mandated ELP assessment used in 41 states. WIDA Screener is used for initial ELL identification; WIDA ACCESS is the annual proficiency assessment. Both are non-negotiable for WIDA-state ELL programs. Include them in your assessment calendar and ensure your instructional EdTech tools generate data that maps to ACCESS domain scores (reading, writing, listening, speaking).
Kuliso's teacher dashboard provides ESL-specific progress data — proficiency level by WIDA domain, academic vocabulary acquisition, home-language usage patterns, and engagement by language group. Reports are designed to inform ESOL program decisions and connect to ACCESS preparation, not just generate generic usage statistics. Reduces reporting burden for ELD coordinators who need EL-specific outcome data.
What to Avoid: Common ESL EdTech Mistakes
A few patterns that consistently undermine ESL programs despite appearing helpful:
- Using Google Translate as a primary scaffold. Translating assignments into the home language is not language scaffolding — it bypasses English language acquisition entirely. Students who complete assignments in Spanish and submit English output acquire no English in the process.
- Choosing tools based on generic EdTech lists. The "top edtech tools for K-12" lists are optimized for general education classrooms. ESL programs have fundamentally different instructional requirements. A tool that's excellent for a native English-speaking student may be inaccessible or counterproductive for a beginning ELL.
- One-language "multilingual" tools. Spanish-only multilingual support is not multilingual support for a school with Vietnamese, Somali, Arabic, and Haitian Creole speakers. Ask every vendor what home languages they support at what depth before purchasing.
- Engagement metrics as a proxy for language learning. A student can be highly engaged with a tool while acquiring no English. Minutes-on-task and points earned are not ESL outcomes. Require platforms to show you language acquisition data, not just usage data.
See Kuliso for your ESL program
Purpose-built for ESL students. 20+ languages. WIDA-aligned. IEP/504 support. Starting at $8/student/year — Title III eligible. Try it before you commit.
View Pricing → Try the Demo →
Kuliso