Question about scheduling software
Posted: Tue Jan 12, 2010 3:59 am
Perhaps one of you (or more than one) will have some ideas about this...
My academic association is living in the pre-computer age, and a friend and I are trying to jolt the jobs placement service into the modern world by finding software that can save time and money for scheduling job interviews (something right now handled by a staffer who uses slips of paper on her kitchen table and fiercely defends her turf because she realizes that technology has made her job partly obsolete). The system we would like to set up should work as follows:
* Grad students and current faculty who have enrolled with the placement service would be given a code number;
* By a specific deadline each job candidate would go onto a part of the association's website, log in, and be given a calendar for the three days of our annual conference, and then would have to "check" the half-hour periods when he or she is available for job interviews;
* The search committees interviewing job candidates would have to do the same thing, entering their code and indicating when the committee members wish to conduct interviews, and also indicating whether they wish to conduct 30-min. or 60-min interviews;
* The rooms set aside by the conference hotel for interviews would need to be entered, and a blank schedule of half-hour interview slots be created for each;
* At a specific deadline someone would tell the program to figure out everyone's schedule (by clicking a button or two), and it would then determine when each search committee was interviewing each candidate and in which room, and e-mail this information to all parties;
* At any time after that deadline, a candidate or committee could go online and try to change the time of an interview, which would work so long as there was a time that worked for both parties, and in the event of a change new e-mails would go out.
I have to think that this is quite easy to do. A Google search shows a lot of conference-scheduling software, but this is a bit different from that. Does anyone out there have thoughts on the best way to go about doing this? Thanks.
My academic association is living in the pre-computer age, and a friend and I are trying to jolt the jobs placement service into the modern world by finding software that can save time and money for scheduling job interviews (something right now handled by a staffer who uses slips of paper on her kitchen table and fiercely defends her turf because she realizes that technology has made her job partly obsolete). The system we would like to set up should work as follows:
* Grad students and current faculty who have enrolled with the placement service would be given a code number;
* By a specific deadline each job candidate would go onto a part of the association's website, log in, and be given a calendar for the three days of our annual conference, and then would have to "check" the half-hour periods when he or she is available for job interviews;
* The search committees interviewing job candidates would have to do the same thing, entering their code and indicating when the committee members wish to conduct interviews, and also indicating whether they wish to conduct 30-min. or 60-min interviews;
* The rooms set aside by the conference hotel for interviews would need to be entered, and a blank schedule of half-hour interview slots be created for each;
* At a specific deadline someone would tell the program to figure out everyone's schedule (by clicking a button or two), and it would then determine when each search committee was interviewing each candidate and in which room, and e-mail this information to all parties;
* At any time after that deadline, a candidate or committee could go online and try to change the time of an interview, which would work so long as there was a time that worked for both parties, and in the event of a change new e-mails would go out.
I have to think that this is quite easy to do. A Google search shows a lot of conference-scheduling software, but this is a bit different from that. Does anyone out there have thoughts on the best way to go about doing this? Thanks.