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Master of Science in Manufacturing Systems Management

Electronic Packaging. Master of Science in Manufacturing Systems Management. For more information contact: Donald C. Price, Ph.D., P.E. Industry Professor of Mechanical Engineering Director of Special Programs Department of Mechanical Engineering Southern Methodist University

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Master of Science in Manufacturing Systems Management

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  1. Electronic Packaging Master of Science inManufacturing Systems Management For more information contact: Donald C. Price, Ph.D., P.E. Industry Professor of Mechanical Engineering Director of Special Programs Department of Mechanical Engineering Southern Methodist University 214-768-xxxx (office) dprice@smu.edu Front page

  2. Purpose of Manufacturing Systems Management Program Manufacturing is undergoing rapid change. Global competition, rapid advances in manufacturing technology, integration across the enterprise and an expanding role for software are putting pressure on manufacturing businesses from the Fortune 500 to small job shops. Success now requires manufacturing professionals with up-to-date knowledge and skills in these rapidly evolving fields. Developed in consultation with business and industry leaders and professionals in manufacturing, the SMU MSMSM program is unique in providing both the latest in technology and the broad management skills needed for success in today’s business. The interdisciplinary program prepares manufacturing professionals to lead their companies in the integration of the entire product commercialization process – from concept, to design, to manufacturing process development, to production, and to distribution. The program provides a broad set of business skills to manage this integrated process including strategies, globalization, project management, and quality. The program is built in three parts. The core technology courses provide the basic building blocks for the modern product realization process, the latest computer assisted tools on the factory floor and fundamentals of quality engineering and management. The management core courses provide an introduction to modern management, exposure to financial measurement and depth in operations management. Each student with the assistance of a faculty advisor then has the opportunity to select electives best suited to their career needs from an approved list of specialized electives or other course offerings in packaging, mechanical engineering, electrical engineering, manufacturing management, and engineering management. Master of Science in Manufacturing Systems Management Admission Requirements Bachelor of Science in one of the engineering disciplines, or in a closely related scientific field with a GPA of at least 3.00 on a 4.00 scale Degree Requirements Thirty-six (36) semester hours (12 courses) for students with a non-engineering degree Thirty (30) semester hours for students with an engineering undergraduate degree Core Curriculum Degree candidates are required to take the following six courses for a total of 18 semester hours: ME 5-7351 Computer Integrated Manufacturing SystemsME 5-7352 Modern Manufacturing Methods and SystemsME 5-7353 Manufacturing Management PracticesME 5-7354 Total Quality ManagementME 5-7355 Integrated Design and ManufacturingME 5-7391 Financial Decisions for Manufacturing and Engineering or an equivalent level finance/accounting course Elective Courses Degree candidates, dependent on their undergraduate background, must take 12 to 18 semester hours of elective courses. They have the flexibility to choose among the courses listed below, or with their adviser’s approval, to select other courses offered by the School of Engineering or the Edwin L. Cox School of Business. ME 5-7356 Human Factors in Manufacturing & DesignME 5-7365 Strategies for Manufacturing FirmsME 5-7366 Manufacturing in a Global EraME 5-7368 Project and Risk ManagementME 5-7369 Managing Technology and Innovation ME 5-7363 Electronic Manufacturing Technology Suitable for Undergraduate Electives Manufacturing Systems Management courses listed in this program are suitable for undergraduate senior electives and undergraduates are encouraged to enroll. Classes are purposely scheduled so that they do not interfere with other senior classes Distance Learning All courses being taught in the Electronic Packaging Program are being taught on-campus and across the nation in the format of Distance Learning. Local students may attend classes on campus or elect to receive DVDs by mail and study the class material at any time that fits within their busy schedules. Busy working professionals can take advantage of this flexibility and convenience to achieve an advanced education. Degree studies may now be balanced against work priorities. It is easy to communicate with professors via telephone, fax, and email. The courses are offered via DVDs mailed to the students following the classroom instruction. Lecture notes are provided to the student via email attachment, so that the notes are available when the student views the DVD. The degree program totals 30 semester credit hours (ten 3-hour courses) with no on-campus or thesis requirement. The program is designed to further your career goals and is ideally suited for military personnel, whether stationed in the US or abroad. Additional information may be found in the DANTES catalog or online. Page 2

  3. Core Courses Degree candidates are required to take the following six courses for a total of 18 semester hours: ME 5-7351 Computer Integrated Manufacturing Systems Basic concepts and use of computer integrated manufacturing. Topics include integration approaches for manufacturing, process planning and simulation, the production process in relation to automated control systems, process design for shop oor control of multiple interacting processes, distributed network process control, real-time aspects, interface protocols and languages of production processes, computational and data processing methods for planning, design, production, and shipping, and methods of optimizing output quality, price and productivity. Economic justification and the use of articial intelligence for planning and process control will be examined. ME 5-7352 Modern Manufacturing Methods and Systems Highly successful manufacturing methods and systems will be examined. Topics include the evolution of manufacturing technology in the United States, mass manufacturing, integrated manufacturing, distribution and manufacturing automation, just-in-time systems, continuous improvement, Kaizen, poka yoke and total quality management. Modern Japanese manufacturing techniques will be examined in depth. The underlying concepts and strategic benets of flexibility, agility, time-based competition, and global manufacturing operation will be covered. The course will be presented from the perspective of the manufacturing manager. ME 5-7353 Manufacturing Management Practices New organizational structures, paradigms and leadership styles. Problem solving within the business context: manufacturing strategies for optimizing production processes across the enterprise. Measuring and reporting business performance. Investment decision making under conditions of risk and uncertainty. Intellectual property strategies, products liability and the legal environment. Contemporary practices, including self-directed work forces, competitive assessment, total productive maintenance, managerial and activity-based costing, and other topics. ME 5-7354 Total Quality Management in Manufacturing An overall total quality management perspective for the design of quality management systems. Metrics for cycle time and defects, baselining and benchmarking, and House of Quality approaches are examined. Managing product quality from inception to deployment. Topics include acquiring and stabilizing new production processes, data collection and analysis for improvement and decision making. Purchasing, process control, reliability are covered in detail. Taguchi and poka-yoke and other practices are examined as tools for implementing TQM. ME 5-7355 Integrated Design and Manufacturing Industrial performance is strongly correlated to success in integrating design and manufacturing. The interrelationships between the total product realization cycle, product generation, and manufacturing are examined with the objective of improving industrial performance. ME 5-7391 Financial Decisions for Manufacturing & Engineering This could be an equivalent level finance or accounting course No photos yet !!! Page 3

  4. Manufacturing Systems Management Electives . ME 5-7356 Human Factors in Design and Manufacturing A senior-graduate course that deals with human factors or ergonomics relating to designing for human use. The lectures cover the empirical and analytical aspects of design and manufacturing as affected by the need to accommodate human use and abilities. Included are topics on visual displays of static and dynamic information; text, graphics symbols codes; auditory, tactual, and olfactory displays; speech and nonverbal communications; physical work-materials handling; motor skills; hand-tool devices and controls. The workplace design, anthropometry, component arrangement in space, lighting, sound climate, and motion will also be covered. ME 5-7365 Strategies for Manufacturing Firms Examines the development and implementation of strategies for product design and manufacturing that best supports the overall strategy of the firm. Topics include positioning the product and production system in the industry, location and capacity decision, implementing manufacturing technologies, facilities planning, vertical integration, logistics planning, and organizational culture. Case studies of manufacturing firms are used extensively. ME 5-7366 Manufacturing in a Global Era This course examines goals and strategies for manufacturing operations in the multinational environment. Topics include decision making for decentralizing and setting up foreign manufacturing operations, marketing, sales and distribution strategies, R&D support, location and capacity decisions, implementing new manufacturing technologies, facilities planning and modernizations, vertical integration, outsourcing strategies, logistics planning and organizational cultures. Case studies of manufacturing firms are used. ME 5-7368 Project and Risk Management Focuses on specific concepts, techniques and tools for managing projects successfully. Network planning techniques, resource allocation, models for multi-project scheduling, methods of controlling costs, determining schedules and performance parameters. The basics of risk management including hard analysis, risk analysis, risk control, and risk nancing are covered. The focus of the course is to integrate risk assessment with managerial decision making. Examples and case studies ME 5-7369 Managing Technology and Innovation In the face of rapid technological growth and innovation, a disciplined management approach is necessary to assure a reasonable expectation of success. The course examines the factors of proper selection, justification, and implementation of new technologies within the framework of consumer electronics, advanced materials, and emerging information capabilities, expert systems and machine tool industry. Topics include technological forecasting risk and uncertainty, and project management. ME 5-7363 Electronic Manufacturing Technology Topics include an introduction to the electronics industry, electronic components, the theory and methods of manufacture of solid state devices, packaging techniques such as wire bonding flip chip and TAB, printed wiring board, soldering and solderability, leaded and surface mounted components, electro-magnetic interference, electrostatic discharge prevention, testability and electronic stress screening. No photos yet !!! Page 4

  5. Kevin Cluff, Ph.D. University of Maryland Abbott Laboratories Dallas, TX Adjunct Professor of Mechanical Engineering Mechanical Engineering Department Southern Methodist University Dallas, TX Gemunu Happawana, Ph. D. Purdue University Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering Mechanical Engineering Department Southern Methodist University Dallas, TX Charles Lovas, Ph.D. ??? Associate professor of Mechanical Engineering Mechanical Engineering Department Southern Methodist University Dallas, TX William Muto, Ph.D. ???? Abbott Laboratories Adjunct Professor of Mechanical Engineering Mechanical Engineering Department Southern Methodist University Dallas, TX David Nowacki, MBA and M.S. in Finance Louisiana State University DJN Investments Dallas, TX Adjunct Professor of Mechanical Engineering Southern Methodist University Dallas, TX Rod Pipinich, Dr. Engr., P.E. Southern Methodist University Lockheed Martin Aeronautics Ft. Worth, TX Adjunct Professor of Mechanical Engineering, Southern Methodist University Dallas, TX Nuraj Rajapakse, Ph.D. Southern Methodist University Lennox Industries Carrollton, TX Adjunct Professor of Mechanical Engineering Southern Methodist University Dallas, TX Allen Tilley, MBA Southern Methodist University Schubert Packaging Systems LLC (CEO-Retired) Dallas, TX PepsiCo Foods International (VP-Operations) Dallas, TX Adjunct Professor of Mechanical Engineering Southern Methodist University Dallas, TX Manufacturing Systems Management Instructors Page 5

  6. Donald C. Price, Ph.D., P.E. Director - Electronic Packaging Program Donald C. Price, Ph.D., P.E. is Industry Professor of Mechanical Engineering and Director of the Electronic Packaging Program and the Manufacturing Systems Management Program within the Mechanical Engineering Department. Dr. Price was formerly a Principal Engineering Fellow at Raytheon Electronic Systems, a military electronics contractor. Dr. Price has more than 32 years experience in the electronic packaging industry. Dr. Price received the BSME and MSME degrees from Southern Methodist University and the PhD degree from Oklahoma State University. Dr. Price served as a member of the faculty of the Mechanical Engineering Department at Southern Methodist University from 1965 to 1970 and left, as an Associate professor, for a position in industry. While employed at Texas Instruments and Raytheon, Dr. price served as an Adjunct Professor from 1985 until 2006. In December of 2006, Dr. Price retired from Raytheon and joined the Mechanical Engineering Department at SMU on a full-time basis. While employed at Texas Instruments and Raytheon, Dr. Price was responsible for the thermal management of a wide range of Raytheon products, including airborne missile systems, airborne- and ground-based electro-optics systems, and phased-array radar systems. This activity involved thermal model simulations of military systems and the computer-aided design of coldplates and heat exchangers. The work also includes the thermal design of airborne electronic pods cooled by vapor-cycle or air-cycle refrigeration systems. Dr. Price has been a member of a number of University Industry Advisory Boards, including the SMU Mechanical Engineering Department Board for Knowledge, where he served as chair of the curriculum committee. Dr. Price is a member of several technical and professional societies: ASME, IEEE, AIAA, IMAPS, TSPE, NSPE, and ASEE. The ASME North Texas Section (NTS) Electronic and Photonic Packaging Division (EPPD) selected Dr. Price as Engineer-of-the-Year for 1997, and the ASME NTS selected him as the Engineer-of-the-Year for 1998. The Dallas Chapter of the Texas Society of Professional Engineers honored Dr. Price as Engineer-of-the-Year for 2001-02. Dr. Price was further honored as an ASME Fellow in 2002 and was designated as an ASME Life Fellow in 2004. Dr. Price served as Chairman of the ASME North Texas Section Industry Advisory Board from to 2006. At the national level of ASME, he has been a member of the K-16 Committee on Heat Transfer in Electronic Systems since 1996. He served as Vice-Chair of this committee from 2000 to 2003 and as Chair from 2003-05. Dr. Price has been a member of the ASME Electronic and Photonic Packaging Division (EPPD) since 1996. He became a member of the EPPD Executive Committee in 2001 and served the executive committee as Secretary from 2002-03, Treasurer from 2003-04, Vice-Chairman from 2004-05, and Chairman for 2005-06. Dr. Price served the ASME InterPack Conference as a Session Chair in 1997, Thermal Management Track Chair in 1999, Conference Program Chair in 2001, and General Chair of the conference in 2003. Dr. Price currently serves as a technical reviewer for the ASME J. of Heat Transfer and the ASME J. of Electronic Packaging. As an employee of Raytheon, Dr. Price has been issued five US patents and three foreign patents. In addition, he is co-inventor of two US Patent applications, which are currently pending. He has published numerous technical papers in referred journals and conference proceedings, and he has made technical presentations at society conferences. Dr. Price has made numerous presentations on professionalism (Ten Keys to a Successful Engineering Career) to a wide variety of engineering and student groups. Dr. Price has been married to his wife, Barbara, for almost 49 years, and they consider themselves fortunate to have been parents to four children and are most proud of their seven grandchildren. Donald C. Price, Ph.D., P.E. Director – Electronic Packaging Back page

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