What the study found
The study found that a case study at Bucknell University led to final exam scheduling software that saved time for the Registrar’s office and substantially improved student exam schedules.
Why the authors say this matters
The authors present the software as open-source, user-friendly, and highly customizable, and the findings indicate that these features matter for practical scheduling use in a registrar’s office.
What the researchers tested
The researchers conducted a case study in collaboration with Bucknell University’s Registrar’s office. They designed integer programming models and heuristics and implemented the approach in software.
What worked and what didn't
The abstract says the approach saved time for the Registrar’s office and substantially improved student exam schedules. It also says the software was open-source, user-friendly, and highly customizable.
What to keep in mind
The available summary does not describe specific limitations, comparison baselines, or detailed evaluation results beyond the stated improvements.
Key points
- A Bucknell University case study addressed final exam scheduling.
- The researchers used integer programming models and heuristics.
- The resulting software was described as open-source, user-friendly, and highly customizable.
- The abstract says the approach saved time for the Registrar’s office.
- The abstract says student exam schedules were substantially improved.
Disclosure
- Research title:
- Open-source scheduling improved Bucknell final exams
- Image credit:
- Photo by Daniil Komov on Pexels
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