Doodle Sign Up For Time Slots
One of the things I like about Outlook is the ability to flip through everyone’s schedule to find a likely meeting time. But when everyone isn’t in the same Outlook system, we end up having to find a time via email. You write, “When can you meet?” And the 7 people you’re trying to get together send you an email back some with when they’re available and some when they’re not available. You then have the fun and excitement of creating a matrix that will show the best time for everybody.
Doodle is a scheduling platform you can use to suggest available times, invite participants to vote, and pick a final time per participants' responses. Start by setting up and customizing your meeting request, including potential time slots and meeting duration. Then, send the link to participants, who will indicate their.
- Scheduling by email can be a huge time sink. I love Doodle, which is a great meeting scheduler. However, Doodle is usually used to find a single time when a large group of people can meet. I want to meet with each student at a unique time. A few weeks ago I discovered that Doodle can be used for this purpose.
- Doodle provides solutions that take the pain out of finding the right date and time for a group of people to meet and makes scheduling virtually effortless. The basic service on www.doodle.com is the world’s leading online scheduling tool with a rapidly growing user base of more than three million unique visitors per month.
Or perhaps you have students schedule time to meet with you one on one? Want to find an easier option than a sheet of paper circulated around the room or taped to your office door? Or maybe you want to schedule time with your online students and that sheet of paper just doesn’t work at all?
Or maybe you have students writing research papers and you want to limit what the paper topics are and how many students can write about each topic?
Enter Doodle.com.
The instructions are simple. “Create a poll.” “Forward the link to the poll to the participants.” “Follow online what the participants vote for.” “Free. No registration required.” Even though you don’t have to register I recommend that you do. Registering allows you easy access to all of your polls in one place, both the ones you’ve created and the ones you’ve participated in, through the ‘MyDoodle’ link.
First let’s walk through the process of setting up a poll to schedule a conference call. At the end of this blog I’ll discuss using Doodle to set up student conference schedules and how to use Doodle to manage students and their research paper topics.
At Doodle.com clicking ‘schedule an event’ produces this screen. Type in a title, an optional description, your name, and your email address. If you registered and are logged in, your name and email address are automatically entered.
Clicking the ‘next’ button at the bottom of the page (not pictured) produces this date selection page. Since this is a conference call for July 13th, I only selected July 13th. You may choose as many dates as you’d like. Just click on each date to select it. To deselect a date, you may either click the date in the calendar again or click the red X next to the date in the ‘selected dates’ area. The arrows next to ‘July 2009’ allow you to change months.
Click ‘next’ at the bottom of the page (again, not shown). Now we can choose our times. Doodle is quite flexible in terms of how you can enter times.
Here I’ve clicked the links to ‘enable time-zone support’ and ‘add further time slots.’ I’ve chosen my time zone, and I’ve entered some times. Notice that if I had more than one day available for the conference call, there would be an additional row for that day. Once I had selected the times for the first day I could copy and paste those times into each subsequent row using the ‘copy and paste first row’ option.
When I click ‘Finish,’ Doodle will send me two emails. The first contains a participant link that I will send out to my conference call participants. The second contains an administrative link that will allow me to edit or delete the poll. If I’m registered, I can also access the administrative features by logging into Doodle.com and clicking on ‘MyDoodle.’
This is what the poll looks like after I’ve entered the times that I’m available. If you’re not in the Pacific time zone, you can choose your time zone, and click ‘update.’ Doodle will change the time to match your time zone. Just type your name in the empty box, check the times that you’re available, and click ‘save.’ That’s it!
You can go back into your poll and edit it whenever you’d like by using the administrator link. If you change the time options after someone has already participated, little question marks will appear in those time slots for each participant. This means that you don’t know whether the participants who have already participated would have chosen those new options over the ones they did choose. Email your participants to let them know that you changed the options and that they can re-vote.
You may have noticed that on the last screen, before we hit ‘finished’ there was an ‘options’ button.
‘Yes-No-Ifneedbe Poll’ allows your participants to choose ‘if need be’ instead of just yes or no. Very handy!
‘Hidden poll’ is self-explanatory.
‘Only you can modify/delete votes and comments’ disallows your participants from modifying or deleting their own votes and comments. Note that the only participants who can modify or delete their own votes and comments are those who have registered with Doodle.com.
‘Limit number of OKs per participants (row) to 1.’ We wouldn’t want to do this for our scheduling poll since the goal is to find times that work for everyone. But there may be a poll where you’d want everyone to choose only one option.
‘Limit number of OKs per option (column).’ If you were organizing an event where you needed two volunteers for each time slot, this feature would be handy. Click that option then in the ‘limit’ box, type 2.
Student conferences
Do you hold individual conferences with students? Create a scheduling poll with your available time divided into 15-minute time slots. Under ‘options,’ select ‘limit number of OKs per option (column)’ and ‘limit number of OKs per participant (row) to 1’ so that students can only sign up for one time slot.
Here is what such a poll might look like.
Notice that once a participant has selected a time slot, that time slot is not available for anyone else. The scroll bar on the bottom allows participants to scroll to the right to see more days.
Student research papers
Not only can Doodle manage scheduling, but it can manage any kind of straight-forward poll.
To create this poll on the Doodle.com main page, I selected “make a choice.” I put in the topics choices and using ‘options’ I limited students to only one topic, but up to 4 students can choose each topic.
Doodle Sign Up For Time Slots
In conclusion
Doodle Sign Up For Time Slot Demonstration
If you’ve used Doodle or if you decide to try it, let me know how you’re using it and how it works for you!
Today Doodle released a calendar connector that works with Apple’s iCal. This means that Doodle can now interface with iCal, Outlook, Google, Exchange, and Lotus calendars. I tested this today with my iCal and I think it has a lot of potential.
Doodle can be used in a number of different ways. At its most basic it is an online polling application but it also allows for event scheduling and has a MeetMe portion where others can schedule appointments with you. It’s a great tool because the user/student doesn’t have to have a Doodle account to complete a poll or schedule an appointment.
Uses for Faculty
Appointment Scheduling:
Once you connect Doodle to your calendar it becomes a powerful and efficient tool for faculty. If you use the CofC Exchange calendar then other faculty and staff can easily schedule appointments with you, but unfortunately students cannot. In addition, many faculty use iCal or Google as their primary calendar and not Exchange which makes it difficult for Exchange users to schedule with you. By using Doodle’s MeetMe and connecting it to your calendar of choice you can allow anyone, whether on campus or off, to schedule an appointment with you. Doodle only shows that you are “busy” but doesn’t show what you’re doing.
Scheduling Tip: To create set timeslots where students can schedule appointments don’t link your normal calendar to Doodle. Instead, create a secondary calendar that shows you busy for all the times that you do NOT want appoints scheduled and link that to your MeetMe page. This way students can only sign up for specific time slots.
Event Planning:
MeetMe is a great way to allow scheduling for yourself but occasionally you need to find a meeting time for a group of people. This can easily be done via the Schedule an Event tool. This tool allows you to name several time slots and have your participants vote on the time or times that works best for them. You can then easily see which has the most responses and add that to your calendar.
Polling:
Lastly, Doodle allows you to create quick and easy polls that you can use in your class. These polls can be used to obtain all types of information from your students from demographic information to demonstrating conceptual understanding.
Doodle is free and easy to use so take a look at it. I think you will be pleasantly surprised.