Staff Shift Fairness: Worksheet 6 - Intermediate-Advanced Practice Staff Shift Fairness INTERMEDIATE ADVANCED

Ready to master Staff Shift Fairness? This timed practice ⚡ worksheet (6/10) presents 20 intermediate-advanced-level challenges. Focus area: speed building. Learn to solve staff shift fairness tricks, handle staff shift fairness shortcut methods, and perfect staff shift fairness bank exam questions with our step-by-step solutions.

📝 Worksheet 6 of 10 • 20 questions • ⏱️ Estimated time: 20 minutes • 🎯 Intermediate Advanced level

What you'll learn in this worksheet:
Your progress through Staff Shift Fairness
Worksheet 6 of 10 (55% complete)

Question 1

A hospital needs to schedule 5 staff for 7 days (Friday, Monday, Wednesday...). Each day has 3 shifts: Morning, Evening, Night. Undesirable shifts (higher weight = more undesirable): - Weekend Night: weight 3 - Weekend Evening: weight 2 - Any Night: weight 1 After creating a fair schedule, what is the fairness gap (difference between max and min undesirable weights assigned to any staff)?
Step-by-step solution (Fairness Scheduling):

1. Total shifts to assign:
- 7 days × 3 shifts = 21 shifts
2. Shifts per person: 21 ÷ 5 = 4 with 1 extra shifts
3. Undesirable weight distribution:
- Alice: 3 points
- Bob: 2 points
- Carol: 4 points
- Emma: 3 points
- Frank: 3 points

4. Fairness gap: 4 - 2 = 2

Key Strategy: Fair scheduling aims to minimize the maximum difference in undesirable shift assignments across all staff.

Question 2

A hospital needs to schedule 5 staff for 7 days (Wednesday, Tuesday, Thursday...). Each day has 3 shifts: Morning, Evening, Night. Undesirable shifts (higher weight = more undesirable): - Weekend Night: weight 3 - Weekend Evening: weight 2 - Any Night: weight 1 After creating a fair schedule, what is the fairness gap (difference between max and min undesirable weights assigned to any staff)?
Step-by-step solution (Fairness Scheduling):

1. Total shifts to assign:
- 7 days × 3 shifts = 21 shifts
2. Shifts per person: 21 ÷ 5 = 4 with 1 extra shifts
3. Undesirable weight distribution:
- Alice: 0 points
- Carol: 2 points
- David: 5 points
- Emma: 4 points
- Frank: 4 points

4. Fairness gap: 5 - 0 = 5

Key Strategy: Fair scheduling aims to minimize the maximum difference in undesirable shift assignments across all staff.

Question 3

A hospital needs to schedule 5 staff for 7 days (Monday, Friday, Saturday...). Each day has 3 shifts: Morning, Evening, Night. Undesirable shifts (higher weight = more undesirable): - Weekend Night: weight 3 - Weekend Evening: weight 2 - Any Night: weight 1 After creating a fair schedule, what is the fairness gap (difference between max and min undesirable weights assigned to any staff)?
Step-by-step solution (Fairness Scheduling):

1. Total shifts to assign:
- 7 days × 3 shifts = 21 shifts
2. Shifts per person: 21 ÷ 5 = 4 with 1 extra shifts
3. Undesirable weight distribution:
- Alice: 3 points
- Bob: 2 points
- Carol: 5 points
- David: 0 points
- Frank: 5 points

4. Fairness gap: 5 - 0 = 5

Key Strategy: Fair scheduling aims to minimize the maximum difference in undesirable shift assignments across all staff.

Question 4

A hospital needs to schedule 5 staff for 7 days (Tuesday, Monday, Thursday...). Each day has 3 shifts: Morning, Evening, Night. Undesirable shifts (higher weight = more undesirable): - Weekend Night: weight 3 - Weekend Evening: weight 2 - Any Night: weight 1 After creating a fair schedule, what is the fairness gap (difference between max and min undesirable weights assigned to any staff)?
Step-by-step solution (Fairness Scheduling):

1. Total shifts to assign:
- 7 days × 3 shifts = 21 shifts
2. Shifts per person: 21 ÷ 5 = 4 with 1 extra shifts
3. Undesirable weight distribution:
- Alice: 2 points
- Bob: 0 points
- Carol: 6 points
- Emma: 1 points
- Frank: 6 points

4. Fairness gap: 6 - 0 = 6

Key Strategy: Fair scheduling aims to minimize the maximum difference in undesirable shift assignments across all staff.

Question 5

A hospital needs to schedule 5 staff for 7 days (Wednesday, Thursday, Monday...). Each day has 3 shifts: Morning, Evening, Night. Undesirable shifts (higher weight = more undesirable): - Weekend Night: weight 3 - Weekend Evening: weight 2 - Any Night: weight 1 After creating a fair schedule, what is the fairness gap (difference between max and min undesirable weights assigned to any staff)?
Step-by-step solution (Fairness Scheduling):

1. Total shifts to assign:
- 7 days × 3 shifts = 21 shifts
2. Shifts per person: 21 ÷ 5 = 4 with 1 extra shifts
3. Undesirable weight distribution:
- Alice: 4 points
- Bob: 5 points
- Carol: 1 points
- David: 4 points
- Frank: 1 points

4. Fairness gap: 5 - 1 = 4

Key Strategy: Fair scheduling aims to minimize the maximum difference in undesirable shift assignments across all staff.

Question 6

A hospital needs to schedule 5 staff for 7 days (Tuesday, Thursday, Friday...). Each day has 3 shifts: Morning, Evening, Night. Undesirable shifts (higher weight = more undesirable): - Weekend Night: weight 3 - Weekend Evening: weight 2 - Any Night: weight 1 After creating a fair schedule, what is the fairness gap (difference between max and min undesirable weights assigned to any staff)?
Step-by-step solution (Fairness Scheduling):

1. Total shifts to assign:
- 7 days × 3 shifts = 21 shifts
2. Shifts per person: 21 ÷ 5 = 4 with 1 extra shifts
3. Undesirable weight distribution:
- Alice: 1 points
- Bob: 4 points
- Carol: 0 points
- David: 6 points
- Emma: 4 points

4. Fairness gap: 6 - 0 = 6

Key Strategy: Fair scheduling aims to minimize the maximum difference in undesirable shift assignments across all staff.

Question 7

A hospital needs to schedule 5 staff for 7 days (Wednesday, Monday, Saturday...). Each day has 3 shifts: Morning, Evening, Night. Undesirable shifts (higher weight = more undesirable): - Weekend Night: weight 3 - Weekend Evening: weight 2 - Any Night: weight 1 After creating a fair schedule, what is the fairness gap (difference between max and min undesirable weights assigned to any staff)?
Step-by-step solution (Fairness Scheduling):

1. Total shifts to assign:
- 7 days × 3 shifts = 21 shifts
2. Shifts per person: 21 ÷ 5 = 4 with 1 extra shifts
3. Undesirable weight distribution:
- Alice: 1 points
- Bob: 4 points
- Carol: 1 points
- David: 2 points
- Emma: 7 points

4. Fairness gap: 7 - 1 = 6

Key Strategy: Fair scheduling aims to minimize the maximum difference in undesirable shift assignments across all staff.

Question 8

A hospital needs to schedule 5 staff for 7 days (Saturday, Monday, Friday...). Each day has 3 shifts: Morning, Evening, Night. Undesirable shifts (higher weight = more undesirable): - Weekend Night: weight 3 - Weekend Evening: weight 2 - Any Night: weight 1 After creating a fair schedule, what is the fairness gap (difference between max and min undesirable weights assigned to any staff)?
Step-by-step solution (Fairness Scheduling):

1. Total shifts to assign:
- 7 days × 3 shifts = 21 shifts
2. Shifts per person: 21 ÷ 5 = 4 with 1 extra shifts
3. Undesirable weight distribution:
- Alice: 1 points
- Bob: 1 points
- Carol: 5 points
- David: 4 points
- Frank: 4 points

4. Fairness gap: 5 - 1 = 4

Key Strategy: Fair scheduling aims to minimize the maximum difference in undesirable shift assignments across all staff.

Question 9

A hospital needs to schedule 5 staff for 7 days (Tuesday, Friday, Thursday...). Each day has 3 shifts: Morning, Evening, Night. Undesirable shifts (higher weight = more undesirable): - Weekend Night: weight 3 - Weekend Evening: weight 2 - Any Night: weight 1 After creating a fair schedule, what is the fairness gap (difference between max and min undesirable weights assigned to any staff)?
Step-by-step solution (Fairness Scheduling):

1. Total shifts to assign:
- 7 days × 3 shifts = 21 shifts
2. Shifts per person: 21 ÷ 5 = 4 with 1 extra shifts
3. Undesirable weight distribution:
- Alice: 1 points
- Bob: 4 points
- Carol: 3 points
- David: 3 points
- Emma: 4 points

4. Fairness gap: 4 - 1 = 3

Key Strategy: Fair scheduling aims to minimize the maximum difference in undesirable shift assignments across all staff.

Question 10

A hospital needs to schedule 5 staff for 7 days (Sunday, Monday, Friday...). Each day has 3 shifts: Morning, Evening, Night. Undesirable shifts (higher weight = more undesirable): - Weekend Night: weight 3 - Weekend Evening: weight 2 - Any Night: weight 1 After creating a fair schedule, what is the fairness gap (difference between max and min undesirable weights assigned to any staff)?
Step-by-step solution (Fairness Scheduling):

1. Total shifts to assign:
- 7 days × 3 shifts = 21 shifts
2. Shifts per person: 21 ÷ 5 = 4 with 1 extra shifts
3. Undesirable weight distribution:
- Alice: 4 points
- Bob: 2 points
- Carol: 1 points
- Emma: 4 points
- Frank: 4 points

4. Fairness gap: 4 - 1 = 3

Key Strategy: Fair scheduling aims to minimize the maximum difference in undesirable shift assignments across all staff.

Question 11

A hospital needs to schedule 5 staff for 7 days (Friday, Thursday, Monday...). Each day has 3 shifts: Morning, Evening, Night. Undesirable shifts (higher weight = more undesirable): - Weekend Night: weight 3 - Weekend Evening: weight 2 - Any Night: weight 1 After creating a fair schedule, what is the fairness gap (difference between max and min undesirable weights assigned to any staff)?
Step-by-step solution (Fairness Scheduling):

1. Total shifts to assign:
- 7 days × 3 shifts = 21 shifts
2. Shifts per person: 21 ÷ 5 = 4 with 1 extra shifts
3. Undesirable weight distribution:
- Alice: 1 points
- Carol: 7 points
- David: 1 points
- Emma: 0 points
- Frank: 6 points

4. Fairness gap: 7 - 0 = 7

Key Strategy: Fair scheduling aims to minimize the maximum difference in undesirable shift assignments across all staff.

Question 12

A hospital needs to schedule 5 staff for 7 days (Wednesday, Tuesday, Thursday...). Each day has 3 shifts: Morning, Evening, Night. Undesirable shifts (higher weight = more undesirable): - Weekend Night: weight 3 - Weekend Evening: weight 2 - Any Night: weight 1 After creating a fair schedule, what is the fairness gap (difference between max and min undesirable weights assigned to any staff)?
Step-by-step solution (Fairness Scheduling):

1. Total shifts to assign:
- 7 days × 3 shifts = 21 shifts
2. Shifts per person: 21 ÷ 5 = 4 with 1 extra shifts
3. Undesirable weight distribution:
- Alice: 4 points
- Bob: 0 points
- Carol: 3 points
- David: 4 points
- Frank: 4 points

4. Fairness gap: 4 - 0 = 4

Key Strategy: Fair scheduling aims to minimize the maximum difference in undesirable shift assignments across all staff.

Question 13

A hospital needs to schedule 5 staff for 7 days (Monday, Sunday, Thursday...). Each day has 3 shifts: Morning, Evening, Night. Undesirable shifts (higher weight = more undesirable): - Weekend Night: weight 3 - Weekend Evening: weight 2 - Any Night: weight 1 After creating a fair schedule, what is the fairness gap (difference between max and min undesirable weights assigned to any staff)?
Step-by-step solution (Fairness Scheduling):

1. Total shifts to assign:
- 7 days × 3 shifts = 21 shifts
2. Shifts per person: 21 ÷ 5 = 4 with 1 extra shifts
3. Undesirable weight distribution:
- Alice: 1 points
- Bob: 5 points
- David: 3 points
- Emma: 2 points
- Frank: 4 points

4. Fairness gap: 5 - 1 = 4

Key Strategy: Fair scheduling aims to minimize the maximum difference in undesirable shift assignments across all staff.

Question 14

A hospital needs to schedule 5 staff for 7 days (Wednesday, Tuesday, Friday...). Each day has 3 shifts: Morning, Evening, Night. Undesirable shifts (higher weight = more undesirable): - Weekend Night: weight 3 - Weekend Evening: weight 2 - Any Night: weight 1 After creating a fair schedule, what is the fairness gap (difference between max and min undesirable weights assigned to any staff)?
Step-by-step solution (Fairness Scheduling):

1. Total shifts to assign:
- 7 days × 3 shifts = 21 shifts
2. Shifts per person: 21 ÷ 5 = 4 with 1 extra shifts
3. Undesirable weight distribution:
- Alice: 1 points
- Bob: 1 points
- David: 7 points
- Emma: 0 points
- Frank: 6 points

4. Fairness gap: 7 - 0 = 7

Key Strategy: Fair scheduling aims to minimize the maximum difference in undesirable shift assignments across all staff.

Question 15

A hospital needs to schedule 5 staff for 7 days (Sunday, Friday, Monday...). Each day has 3 shifts: Morning, Evening, Night. Undesirable shifts (higher weight = more undesirable): - Weekend Night: weight 3 - Weekend Evening: weight 2 - Any Night: weight 1 After creating a fair schedule, what is the fairness gap (difference between max and min undesirable weights assigned to any staff)?
Step-by-step solution (Fairness Scheduling):

1. Total shifts to assign:
- 7 days × 3 shifts = 21 shifts
2. Shifts per person: 21 ÷ 5 = 4 with 1 extra shifts
3. Undesirable weight distribution:
- Alice: 2 points
- Bob: 2 points
- Carol: 2 points
- Emma: 4 points
- Frank: 5 points

4. Fairness gap: 5 - 2 = 3

Key Strategy: Fair scheduling aims to minimize the maximum difference in undesirable shift assignments across all staff.

Question 16

A hospital needs to schedule 5 staff for 7 days (Tuesday, Sunday, Saturday...). Each day has 3 shifts: Morning, Evening, Night. Undesirable shifts (higher weight = more undesirable): - Weekend Night: weight 3 - Weekend Evening: weight 2 - Any Night: weight 1 After creating a fair schedule, what is the fairness gap (difference between max and min undesirable weights assigned to any staff)?
Step-by-step solution (Fairness Scheduling):

1. Total shifts to assign:
- 7 days × 3 shifts = 21 shifts
2. Shifts per person: 21 ÷ 5 = 4 with 1 extra shifts
3. Undesirable weight distribution:
- Bob: 1 points
- Carol: 1 points
- David: 5 points
- Emma: 3 points
- Frank: 5 points

4. Fairness gap: 5 - 1 = 4

Key Strategy: Fair scheduling aims to minimize the maximum difference in undesirable shift assignments across all staff.

Question 17

A hospital needs to schedule 5 staff for 7 days (Saturday, Friday, Sunday...). Each day has 3 shifts: Morning, Evening, Night. Undesirable shifts (higher weight = more undesirable): - Weekend Night: weight 3 - Weekend Evening: weight 2 - Any Night: weight 1 After creating a fair schedule, what is the fairness gap (difference between max and min undesirable weights assigned to any staff)?
Step-by-step solution (Fairness Scheduling):

1. Total shifts to assign:
- 7 days × 3 shifts = 21 shifts
2. Shifts per person: 21 ÷ 5 = 4 with 1 extra shifts
3. Undesirable weight distribution:
- Alice: 2 points
- Carol: 4 points
- David: 1 points
- Emma: 3 points
- Frank: 5 points

4. Fairness gap: 5 - 1 = 4

Key Strategy: Fair scheduling aims to minimize the maximum difference in undesirable shift assignments across all staff.

Question 18

A hospital needs to schedule 5 staff for 7 days (Tuesday, Friday, Saturday...). Each day has 3 shifts: Morning, Evening, Night. Undesirable shifts (higher weight = more undesirable): - Weekend Night: weight 3 - Weekend Evening: weight 2 - Any Night: weight 1 After creating a fair schedule, what is the fairness gap (difference between max and min undesirable weights assigned to any staff)?
Step-by-step solution (Fairness Scheduling):

1. Total shifts to assign:
- 7 days × 3 shifts = 21 shifts
2. Shifts per person: 21 ÷ 5 = 4 with 1 extra shifts
3. Undesirable weight distribution:
- Alice: 2 points
- Bob: 1 points
- Carol: 6 points
- Emma: 1 points
- Frank: 5 points

4. Fairness gap: 6 - 1 = 5

Key Strategy: Fair scheduling aims to minimize the maximum difference in undesirable shift assignments across all staff.

Question 19

A hospital needs to schedule 5 staff for 7 days (Monday, Sunday, Friday...). Each day has 3 shifts: Morning, Evening, Night. Undesirable shifts (higher weight = more undesirable): - Weekend Night: weight 3 - Weekend Evening: weight 2 - Any Night: weight 1 After creating a fair schedule, what is the fairness gap (difference between max and min undesirable weights assigned to any staff)?
Step-by-step solution (Fairness Scheduling):

1. Total shifts to assign:
- 7 days × 3 shifts = 21 shifts
2. Shifts per person: 21 ÷ 5 = 4 with 1 extra shifts
3. Undesirable weight distribution:
- Alice: 1 points
- Carol: 5 points
- David: 3 points
- Emma: 3 points
- Frank: 3 points

4. Fairness gap: 5 - 1 = 4

Key Strategy: Fair scheduling aims to minimize the maximum difference in undesirable shift assignments across all staff.

Question 20

A hospital needs to schedule 5 staff for 7 days (Thursday, Friday, Sunday...). Each day has 3 shifts: Morning, Evening, Night. Undesirable shifts (higher weight = more undesirable): - Weekend Night: weight 3 - Weekend Evening: weight 2 - Any Night: weight 1 After creating a fair schedule, what is the fairness gap (difference between max and min undesirable weights assigned to any staff)?
Step-by-step solution (Fairness Scheduling):

1. Total shifts to assign:
- 7 days × 3 shifts = 21 shifts
2. Shifts per person: 21 ÷ 5 = 4 with 1 extra shifts
3. Undesirable weight distribution:
- Bob: 2 points
- Carol: 7 points
- David: 1 points
- Emma: 1 points
- Frank: 4 points

4. Fairness gap: 7 - 1 = 6

Key Strategy: Fair scheduling aims to minimize the maximum difference in undesirable shift assignments across all staff.
Previous Worksheet Next Worksheet