SAN FRANCISCO, CA--(Marketwired - Aug 15, 2013) - Today, ClassDojo, the free behavior development platform for teachers, students, and parents, is launching a major update -- version 2.0 of its mobile ...
ClassDojo co-founders Liam Don (left) and Sam Chaudhary believe the success of their free classroom-management app will pave the way for additional paid services meant to support learning at home ...
No sooner had the fifth graders in Jennifer Ellison’s reading class finished watching a series of videos about empathy than they came to her with an idea. They had noticed that when Ellison directed ...
ClassDojo, software for tracking classroom behavior and incentivizing students, has updated its mobile app to allow teachers to access all the desktop features from a mobile device. Now teachers can ...
Can technology save the classroom? With its new iOS app, ClassDojo aims to do just that. ClassDojo allows teachers to track and manage the behavior of their students in real time. The service does ...
TEAM DOJO: Why do students behave better in some classes than others? ClassDojo's latest feature may help you, dear teacher, find out. Today the startup is rolling out a new feature that will allow ...
I wish the ClassDojo app had been around when I was in elementary, middle and high school. Back then, about the only feedback I ever got from my teachers was about my lousy handwriting or that I “wasn ...
San Francisco-based ClassDojo is directing its mojo into a new mobile app. Starting January 15, users of the current mobile apps will have the option to upgrade to one new version, with three ...
ClassDojo, a teaching aid platform designed for use in schools, has today updated its core offering to include a range of new features and the ability to keep parents better informed of progress.
Before Sam Chaudhary and Liam Don began building what would eventually become ClassDojo, they set out to identify the biggest problems teachers face in the classroom every day. After interviewing ...
In our smartphone-centric and distraction-prone society, the simple act of sitting quietly in a chair to focus only your breathing might seem novel, but it can have real benefits: If you can keep your ...