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MATLS 4Z06 Industrial Projects. MSE Capstone Course Joey Kish (Coordinator) Monday, April 29, 2013. Course Description. Industry projects involving materials selection & design in manufacturing or engineering service Tuesdays & Thursdays 2:30-5:30 PM; both terms
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MATLS 4Z06Industrial Projects MSE Capstone Course Joey Kish (Coordinator) Monday, April 29, 2013
Course Description • Industry projects involving materials selection & design in manufacturing or engineering service • Tuesdays & Thursdays 2:30-5:30 PM; both terms • Support lectures in group problem solving, design methodology, information gathering & technical communication
Graduate Attributes Problem Analysis/Design Use of Engineering Tools Individual & Team Work Communication Skills Impact of Engineering on Society Economics and Project Management
Major Learning Outcomes • Apply appropriate knowledge & skills to identify, formulate, analyze complex open-ended engineering problem related to materials selection and design in manufacturing or service • Select/use appropriate techniques, resources & engineering tools, with an understanding of associated limitations • Work effectively as member & leader in teams • Communicate complex engineering concepts • Apply triple bottom line sustainability principles in process
Lectures Problem Solving & Planning Information Research Fundamentals Technical Presentation Preparation Proposal Preparation Statistical Analysis of Data Final Report Preparation
Course Format • Group Project Work: • Each group assigned an industry project, one faculty advisor & one industry advisor • Conduct analysis or lab work at industry facility or at McMater University
Major Deliverables Problem Statement (Oct.) Proposal (Nov.) Progress Review Meetings (Jan. & Feb.) Final Report (Apr.) Peer Reviews (After Each Deliverable)
Budget • Envelope capped at $2,500 per group • Eligible Expenses: • Materials & Supplies • Equipment • Analysis (BIMR & MSE) • Travel
MATLS 4Z06Industrial Projects Working with Industry Joey Kish (Coordinator) Monday, April 29, 2013
Goal • To acquire industry projects for a one-to-one mapping with the number of student groups • With a couple extra for good measure • Groups comprised of 3 or 4 students • 13 Groups in 2012-2013 • 14 Groups in 2011-2012
Timeline • June/July: • Brainstorm on possible industry partners • Email invitation to participate & checklist • “Screen” positive responses for appropriate projects • August: • Work to finalize projects & acquire Letter of Support for OCE application • September • Apply to OCE for funding
Project Suitability • Complex open-ended engineering problem related to materials selection and design in manufacturing or engineering service • Engaged industry partner that is within reasonable travel distance from McMaster University • Ideally no intellectual property and/or confidentiality issues
Checklist Project Description Willingness to fund project Need to scale performance metrics Need to scale economic metrics Need for intellectual property protection Need for confidentiality
Intellectual Property& Confidentiality • Sponsor companies require students to sign a confidentiality and intellectual property agreement to protect existing company intellectual property and to clarify ownership of any new intellectual property that may arise from the project • Students have been asked to waive their rights to intellectual property arising from the project work
OCE Connections • Funding available from Connections Program that Ontario Centres of Excellence runs • Students must develop their own scope of work, meet regularly with their industry partner, and deliver results • Provides opportunity for students to apply their knowledge and skills to an industry-relevant problem • Connections Competition for the Best Project in Ontario Universities
Industry Contribution • Industry must put cash up to a maximum of $1,000 on the table • OCE will match the cash, as will as the in-kind up to the level of industry cash • Apply on-line in September • Letter of Support & budget for each project • Award notification in November
Industry Participation • Project presentations in September • Class presentations as grader • Proposals & Final Reports • Group presentations as grader • Problem Statements & Progress Reviews • Group reports as grader • Problem Statement, Proposal & Final Report
The Good “Real World” materials engineering problems for the students to work on Ontario Government funding available to provide budget envelope not to limit success Expose students to a wide range of materials engineering issues Student employment
The Bad • Industry only cares about technical solution • No interest in economic analyses • No interest in sustainability analyses • Not all groups created equal • Strong groups vs. weak groups • Dependence on sizeable budget envelop that needs to be externally funded