Decoding ClassDojo: psycho-policy, social-emotional learning and persuasive educational technologies

ABSTRACT ClassDojo is one of the world’s most successful educational technologies, currently used by over 3 million teachers and 35 million children globally. It reinforces and enacts emerging governmental ‘psycho-policies’ around the measurement and modification of children’s social and emotional learning in schools. This article focuses specifically on the ways ClassDojo facilitates psychological surveillance through gamification techniques, its links to new psychological concepts of ‘character development,’ ‘growth mindsets’ and ‘personal qualities,’ and its connections to the psychological techniques of Silicon Valley designers. Methodologically, the research mobilizes network analysis to trace the organizational, technical, governmental and scientific relations that are translated together and encoded in the ClassDojo app. Through its alignment with emerging education psycho-policy agendas around the measurement of non-cognitive learning, ClassDojo is a key technology of ‘fast policy’ that functions as a ‘persuasive technology’ of ‘psycho-compulsion’ to reinforce and reward student behaviours that are aligned with governmental strategies around social-emotional learning.

[1]  C. Pollack,et al.  No brain left behind: consequences of neuroscience discourse for education , 2015 .

[2]  Jennifer R. Whitson Gaming the Quantified Self , 2013 .

[3]  M. Pickersgill The social life of the brain: Neuroscience in society , 2013, Current sociology. La Sociologie contemporaine.

[4]  David W. Hursh,et al.  Fast policy: experimental statecraft at the thresholds of neoliberalism , 2017 .

[5]  Venture Labor: Work and the Burden of Risk in Innovative Industries , 2013 .

[6]  Neil Selwyn,et al.  Is Technology Good for Education , 2016 .

[7]  Angela L. Duckworth,et al.  Measurement Matters , 2015, Educational researcher.

[8]  M. Indergaard Venture Labor: Work and the Burden of Risk in Innovative Industries , 2014 .

[9]  Neil Selwyn,et al.  Education and Technology: Key Issues and Debates , 2011 .

[10]  Minsky,et al.  From the New York Times Magazine , 1979 .

[11]  Mark Whitehead,et al.  Changing Behaviours: On the Rise of the Psychological State , 2013 .

[12]  L. Friedli,et al.  Positive affect as coercive strategy: conditionality, activation and the role of psychology in UK government workfare programmes , 2015, Medical Humanities.

[13]  Evgeny V. Morozov,et al.  To Save Everything, Click Here: Technology, Solutionism and the Urge to Fix Problems that Don't Exist by E. Morozov, ed., , 2013, Inf. Polity.

[14]  Thomas S. Popkewitz Numbers in grids of intelligibility: Making sense of how educational truth is told , 2012 .

[15]  Philip Oreopoulos,et al.  Behavioral Economics of Education: Progress and Possibilities , 2014, SSRN Electronic Journal.

[16]  C. Dweck The Secret to Raising Smart Kids , 2007 .

[17]  Ben Williamson Silicon startup schools: technocracy, algorithmic imaginaries and venture philanthropy in corporate education reform , 2018 .

[18]  Angel J. Gordo-Lpez,et al.  Inventing our selves: Psychology, power, and personhood , 2000 .

[19]  N. Rose,et al.  Governing the present: administering economic, social and personal life , 2008 .

[20]  S. Lewis,et al.  Reform first and ask questions later? The implications of (fast) schooling policy and ‘silver bullet’ solutions , 2019 .

[21]  S. Ball Following policy: networks, network ethnography and education policy mobilities , 2016, Globalisation and Education.

[22]  S. Fender The New York Review of Books , 1986 .

[23]  J. Frank Building a Better Teacher , 2015 .

[24]  J. Pykett Brain Culture , 2015 .

[25]  Richard Galdston,et al.  Mind over matter: observations on 50 patients hospitalized with anorexia nervosa. , 1974, Journal of the American Academy of Child Psychiatry.

[26]  R. Edwards,et al.  Actor-Network Theory in Education , 2010 .

[27]  Alistair S. Duff,et al.  Rating the revolution: Silicon Valley in normative perspective , 2016 .

[28]  Michael Burger The perception of the effectiveness of ClassDojo in middle school classrooms: A transcendental phenomenological study , 2015 .