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The 11-year-old ed tech unicorn led by Under 30 alumni Sam Chaudhary and Liam Don was quietly valued at $1.25 billion by Tencent last fall as part of its virtual push. ClassDojo president Liam Don ...
ClassDojo’s first eight years as an edtech consumer startup could look like failure: zero revenue; no paid users; and a team that hasn’t aggressively grown in years. But the company ...
ClassDojo Co-founders Liam Don (left) and Sam Chaudhary have reached millions of teachers with their app. Now, they are beginning to think about monetization.. ClassDojo “The parents really seem ...
Every morning before Cindy Price starts teaching her first graders in New Castle, Delaware, she fires up ClassDojo, a classroom communication app. She checks parent messages, finds out whether ...
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 ...
And it was all precipitated by a short series of five-minute videos created by the education startup ClassDojo. With a staff of less than 30 and $31 million* in funding, ClassDojo has quietly ...
SAN FRANCISCO, April 21, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- ClassDojo, a leader in educational technology, has been recognized for its outstanding commitment to privacy by earning the prestigious Common Sense ...
Stevens, Michael Bell and Jeff Buening Bring Tech and Sales Expertise to Communications and Engagement Company ClassDojo is the #1 communication platform globally for teachers, families ...
School leaders are being urged to think twice before adopting new digital technologies into the classroom, after new research ...
Brian Prybil learned about ClassDojo when he was principal of Washington Elementary School in Moline, Ill., about two-and-a-half hours west of Chicago near the Iowa border. A group of teachers had ...
Blackboard, Schoology, ClassDojo, the list goes on — these apps help teachers communicate with families, and parents and other caregivers keep track of their kids’ learning. Good, right?