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ClassDojo for teachers: an honest 2026 guide
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ClassDojo for teachers: an honest 2026 guide

Setup, dojo points, Class Story, paid vs free, and when it's overkill

KiwiBeeKiwiBee Team
May 28, 2026
10 min read

This is the guide we wish existed when we first set up ClassDojo: an honest, teacher-to-teacher walkthrough of how it works in 2026, how long setup actually takes, where it shines, and the specific scenarios where a simpler free tool gets the job done with less overhead. No affiliate fluff, no marketing pitch. We make a free competing tool and we'll tell you exactly when each is the right pick.

Why so many teachers use ClassDojo

ClassDojo's appeal isn't the behavior tracker per se — there are dozens of those. It's that it bundles four things into one app: behavior tracking, parent messaging, photo updates (Class Story), and student portfolios. For elementary teachers who'd otherwise juggle ClassDojo + Remind + Seesaw + a paper log, the consolidation is the value.

It also has scale: ClassDojo claims to be used in 95% of US K-8 schools, which means most parents already know how to use it. That eliminates a chunk of onboarding friction every new school year.

Setting it up — the realistic timeline

Marketing says "5 minutes". Reality:

Total: about 25-35 minutes of teacher time to get to a functional state, plus a 1-2 week ambient cost of parent follow-up. If you're switching from a paper behavior log, budget another 30 min reading through ClassDojo's settings to find the privacy controls you care about.

The dojo points workflow

Here's what behavior tracking actually looks like during a class:

Two workflow choices that experienced ClassDojo teachers tend to converge on:

Neither is right or wrong — but the consensus has shifted in recent years from "always project" to "start private, project sparingly during specific group activities." Public scoring all day every day starts to feel surveillance-y, even with elementary kids.

Class Story — the parent communication win

Class Story is the photo + video feed you post to once or twice a day. Snap a photo of a science experiment in progress, post it with a caption, and every connected parent sees it in their app within seconds. The whole class sees it on their student view.

This is the feature parents actually value most. Behavior points are abstract; a photo of their kid's face during a successful experiment is concrete. Teachers who post to Class Story 3-5 times a week consistently report the highest parent-satisfaction scores, even when their behavior-tracking discipline is loose.

Practical tip: set a daily 1-minute habit — last 60 seconds before students pack up, snap one photo, post one caption. Done. Don't overthink it.

Portfolios — the underused gem

Each student has a private portfolio (visible only to them, you, and their parent). They can submit work — photos of assignments, voice recordings, videos — and you approve or comment. Over the year, the portfolio builds into a running record of the student's actual work, not just behavior scores.

If you only adopt ONE feature of ClassDojo beyond behavior, make it portfolios. They're the feature parents and admin both ask about, and they give you a real artifact for parent conferences.

Free vs ClassDojo Plus — what teachers actually need

ClassDojo's teacher-side is fully free. ClassDojo Plus is a $7.99/month family-side subscription that families opt into; it does NOT give teachers extra features. So for a teacher, the question is moot — you're on the free tier whether or not your families subscribe.

What teachers occasionally hit as a free-tier limit:

If your school has a paid institutional license, you get more. If not, you get the free-teacher tier, which is more than functional for a single classroom.

Where ClassDojo is overkill

ClassDojo is excellent for the elementary-self-contained-classroom case, but it's overhead in several other scenarios:

Free alternatives for the narrower jobs

The bottom line for teachers

If you teach K-5 in a self-contained classroom, want a single bundled app for behavior + parent comms + Class Story + portfolios, and your families already know ClassDojo — keep using it. The behavior-log piece is fine, the Class Story piece is genuinely valuable, and the portfolio piece is underused but excellent.

If you teach in any other configuration — middle/high, sub work, after-school, multiple small groups — ClassDojo's overhead outweighs its benefits and you're better off with a thin, free, no-signup behavior tracker plus the existing communication channels your school already uses. We built a free behavior tracker that fits this case. Use whatever works.

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