Monday, November 10, 2008

Notifu, Interactive Mobile Messaging for Teachers

I have posted in the past about messaging services such as Remindr, Dial2do, Jott, Remember the Milk, and Sendible. All of which I think are useful. But I have to add another messaging service to this list. It is called Notifu. Notifu allows for group messaging, polling, and FEEDBACK! That is correct, I said, feedback. Notifu allows you to send a message to a person's perferred form of communication such as IM, Twitter, email, or Text Message. Once you create a contact with the contact's preferred communication, you can easily send group messages to multiple contacts and receive feedback from them (no matter which communication tool they are using). For example, I sent out a poll to all my contacts in a particular group asking them what time they preferred to meet. I gave them choices of 4:30, 5:00, & 6:00. When they got their message, they could reply with n4 (for 4:30), n5 (for 5:00) or (n6 for 6:00). Along with their reply they could also send back a message to me such as "n4 cannot attend any other time". All of this feedback is directed into my Notifu account, where the polling and feedback are quantified into legible data.

Classroom Applications
Scheduling and Group Management
I immediately thought this tool could be helpful with administrators and teachers who are trying to schedule and communicate with committees, student and parent groups. In addition, students who form their own study groups can take advantage of Notifu for messaging between the group members.

Polling and Feedback
While I love Polleverywere and Textthemob for in-class polling via cell phones, I think Notifu is a great way to conduct polls and get feedback outside of the classroom.

Brainstroming
The teacher can send out an inquiry question or getting-started question that will be used in class the following day. Students can text back their answer, which automatically appears in the teacher's account. The teacher can then project the answers on the LCD screen the next class session and discuss the answers.

Quizzes
The teacher can send some quiz or review questions to the students by using the polling feature and get the answers back in their private Notifu account (in a timely manner).

Homework
The teacher can send out homework questions or ask for questions on their homework assignments. Students can text back their answers. For example an English teacher can ask his/her students to "summarize" in 160 characters or less, the plot for their Shakespeare reading that night. By asking for short summaries, it forces students to be mindful of their descriptions in their answers (not easy to do with Shakespeare!).

7 comments:

irasocol said...

nice discovery. Thanks once again, you keep me on top of things.

-Ira

Anonymous said...

This one does look very interesting, thanks for showcasing it here on your blog. I really like the ability for feedback, and have registered for an account.
It is amazing how much I've gotten from you the last few months!
Thanks again for all you do,
Mark Carls

Liz Kolb, Ph.D. said...

Ira and Mark
Thank for the feedback---keep it coming! I'm glad some of these post might be useful in your teaching.

-Liz

Rick Weinberg said...

Liz,
I just checked out Notifu. Maybe I'm missing something, which is very possible, but I had to spend a small amount of money to use the service, just $5. I am sure If I were just using Notifu to send tweets or emails there probably would be no charge.

Rick

Liz Kolb, Ph.D. said...

Hi Rick
I have been using it free of charge. I actually do not even see a place that asks for a fee. Are you sure you are using this site?
http://notifu.com/

Anonymous said...

I'm taking an educated guess, but Jott looks like their struggling. When this economy tanks, who will be left?

Anonymous said...

Indeed a very interesting approach; if you're interesting in finding more teacher tools I also recommend you to visit www.standardstoolbox.com.

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