Class App
Forbes|June 13, 2017

By listening to its core audience—teachers—ClassDojo’s educational software has reached 90% of U.S. schools. Now the real work begins: how to get someone to pay for it.

Kathleen Chaykowski
Class App

Every morning before Cindy Price starts teaching her first graders in New Castle, Delaware, she fires up Class Dojo, a classroom management app. She checks parent messages, finds out whether any students will be out sick and reads school news. When a child shows a trait like “amazing thinking” or “great listening,” she adds a point to the student’s avatar—a personalized cartoonish monster—generating a bright ping! that makes classmates perk up. Points come off or disruptive behavior. Twice a day, Price shares class photos or videos with parents. And during free time, she plays ClassDojo’s short personal-growth videos, which use monsters like ClassDojo’s excitable green mascot, Mojo, to teach lessons on empathy and perseverance. “It’s helping teachers be successful in the classroom,” she says.

Teachers like it because teachers have shaped it, in the form of 20,000 who provide constant feedback. That bottom-up approach, and kid friendly gamification, has given it penetration into 90% of U.S. schools, according to the company. “Why don’t we just go to the people doing the work?” says CEO and cofounder Sam Chaudhary. “It sounds obvious, but it wasn’t being done.”

ClassDojo has been translated into 35 languages and made inroads in 180 countries. The company says ClassDojo reaches 7 million kids globally every day, or 1% of the 700 million children in grades K–8 or their equivalent. Price says that at her school, Southern Elementary, nearly all the teachers and a healthy dose of parents use it.

This story is from the June 13, 2017 edition of Forbes.

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This story is from the June 13, 2017 edition of Forbes.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.