Operations research: broadening computer science in a liberal arts college

Item

Title
Operations research: broadening computer science in a liberal arts college
Creator
Anthony, Barbara M.
Date
2020-11-13
Date Available
2020-11-13
Date Issued
2012
Identifier
SIGCSE '12: Proceedings of the 43rd ACM technical symposium on Computer Science Education February 2012, pp 463–468https://doi.org/10.1145/2157136.2157271
uri
https://collections.southwestern.edu/s/suscholar/item/212
Abstract
Operations research, while not traditionally taught at many small or liberal arts colleges, can be a significant asset to the offerings of a computer science department. Often seen as a discipline at the intersection of mathematics, computer science, business, and engineering, it has great interdisciplinary potential and practical appeal, allowing for recruitment of students who may not consider taking a CS0 or CS1 course. A special topics course in operations research was offered by the computer science department at Southwestern University as an upper-level elective, and it was also cross-listed as a business and mathematics elective. Not only did the course benefit computer science majors who appreciated the applications and different perspectives, but it provided a means for the department to serve a wider population, increased interdisciplinary education, and resulted in a filled-to-capacity upper-level course in computer science for the first time in recent memory. This course is now being considered as a permanent elective that will interest computer science majors and minors as well as draw in students from disciplines across campus. For departments with limited faculty resources for teaching non-major courses, offering an operations research course provides an alternative that simultaneously serves the department and the campus as a whole.
Language
English
Publisher
SIGCSE
Subject
Operations research
Computing education
Type
Article