Todd Rogers (behavioral scientist)

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Todd Rogers is an American academic, behavioral scientist, entrepreneur and author. He is the Weatherhead Professor of Public policy at the Harvard Kennedy School.[1] He is the co-founder of the Analyst Institute and EveryDay Labs (formerly InClass Today).[2][3] At the Harvard Kennedy School, he is faculty director of the Behavioral Insights Group[4] and the founding director of the Social Connection and Sports Fandom Initiative at Harvard.[5][6] He is also an academic advisor at the UK's Behavioral Insights Team[7] and a Senior Researcher at ideas42.[8]

Rogers attended Williams College in Williamstown, Massachusetts, and graduated with a double major in Religion and Psychology. He went on to Harvard University where he received an M.A. in Social psychology in 2005. In 2008, he received a Ph.D. in Organizational behavior from Harvard Business School.[3]

Education research

Rogers's research applies behavioral science insights and methods to understand important social challenges and to develop interventions to mitigate them. His current research focuses on interventions to help people maintain and strengthen social connections, with a special focus on sports fandom as a vehicle for making friends[9][6]

Rogers's academic work has been published in Science (journal), Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, American Economic Review, Psychological Science, Management Science (journal),[10] and others. He is regularly cited in popular media including: The New York Times,[11] The Washington Post, Time (magazine),[12] Harvard Business Review,[13] and others.[3]

Career

Rogers is the Director of the Social Connection and Sports Fandom Initiative at Harvard University.[6] Rogers is the co-founder and chief scientist at EveryDay Labs, an organization which seeks to improve student outcomes through behavioral science interventions. EveryDay Labs is best known for scaling absence-reducing interventions proven to reduce the rate of chronic absenteeism by 10-15% in a K–12 setting.[14]

Rogers was the founding executive director of the Analyst Institute. The organization's work in the political realm was covered in The New York Times Magazine,[15] and was also discussed in-depth in Sasha Issenberg's book, The Victory Lab: The Secret Science of Winning Campaigns.[16]

Personal life

Rogers is a cancer survivor, he was diagnosed with non-Hodgkin lymphoma in high school. Raised in Philadelphia, he is a Philadelphia Eagles fan.[17][4]

Books

Selected publications

References

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