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34060-002 F14 Porr

Kent State University             Mon Wed 2:15 – 3:30 PM   room: BA 200

 

Instructor:    Dean A. Porr, Ph.D.        Office: BA A426

Email: dporr@kent.edu                                  Phone: 330-672-1145

Office hrs: Tue 10:00 AM - 3:00 PM and by appointment.

 

Required Text:  Operations Management, 11th edition. By W. J. Stevenson, published by McGraw-Hill, 2012.

 

Course Description: This is a survey course in production and operations management that covers the managerial concepts and the quantitative tools used in the design, planning, operation and control of production systems.

 

Learning Objectives: After completion of this course students should have the skills, information, knowledge, and tools:

·         to develop an understanding of the strategic importance of operations.

·         to understand how operations can provide a competitive advantage in the marketplace.

·      to recognize and use the operational management concepts contained in the text and demonstrated in class.

 

Changes to the syllabus will be announced in class and updated in Blackboard, but the student is ultimately responsible for keeping up to date with such changes.

 

Course Requirements and Grading:

 

a)      Examinations: There will be four scheduled exams, each accounting for 20% of the final grade. The exams will be true/false, multiple choice, short fill-in, and story problems requiring calculations. The exams will be closed book, closed notes, however all formulas will be provided. Personal calculators may be used, but no personal computers or cell phones are to be used during the exams. An optional comprehensive final exam may be taken to replace a missed exam or replace a low score on one of the four regular exams.

 

b)      Homework: Unscheduled homework assignments will be periodically sent to the students via Blackboard with at least 2 days notice before they are due. The students are expected to print out the assignment sheet, complete the homework showing all work, and submit the finished homework sheet at the beginning of class on the designated class date. The average grade for all of the homework assignments will account for 10% of the final grade.

 

c)      Quizzes: There will be several brief unannounced quizzes over the reading assignment (next chapter). The average grade for all the quizzes will account for 10% of the final grade.


Grading: Final grades may be curved, with the following representing a maximum % for each grade:

 

93.34 – 100.00%                                 A                                                                                             73.34 - 76.66%                                    C

90.00 – 93.33%                                   A-                                                                                            70.00 – 73.33%                                    C-

86.67 – 89.99%                                   B+                                                                               66.67 - 69.99%                                    D+

83.34 – 86.66%                                   B                                                                                             60.00 – 66.66%                                    D

80.00 – 83.33%                                   B-                                                                                            00.00 – 59.99%                                    F 

76.67 – 79.99%                                   C+

 

Administrative policies apply to all students in this course:

 

a)     Academic honesty: Cheating means to misrepresent the source, nature, or other conditions of your academic work (e.g., tests, papers, projects, assignments) so as to get undeserved credit.   In addition, it is considered to be cheating when one cooperates with someone else in any such misrepresentation.  The use of the intellectual property of others without giving them appropriate credit is a serious academic offense.  It is the University's policy that cheating or plagiarism result in receiving a failing grade for the work or course.  Repeat offenses result in dismissal from the University.

b)     University policy 3342-3-01.3 requires that students with disabilities be provided reasonable accommodations to ensure their equal access to course content. If you have a documented disability and require accommodations, please contact the instructor at the beginning of the semester to make arrangements for necessary classroom adjustments. Please note, you must first verify your eligibility for these accommodations through Student Accessibility Services (contact 330-672-3391 or visit http://www.kent.edu/sas/index.cfm for more information on registration procedures).

 

c)     Students have responsibility to ensure they are properly enrolled in classes.  You are advised to review your official class schedule (using Student Tools on FlashLine) during the first two weeks of the semester to ensure you are properly enrolled in this class and section.  Should you find an error in your class schedule, you have until Sunday, September 7, 2014 to correct the error.  If registration errors are not corrected by this date and you continue to attend and participate in classes for which you are not officially enrolled, you are advised now that you will not receive a grade at the conclusion of the semester for any class in which you are not properly registered.

d)     If you are eligible to graduate, it is your responsibility to apply for graduation before the set deadline (May Graduation: Apply before September 15th August Graduation: Apply before December 15th December Graduation: Apply before March 15th)  If you apply after the deadline you will be assessed a $200 late fee. Please see your academic advisor as soon as   possible if you are uncertain as to your progress toward graduation.  To apply for graduation complete the following steps: Log onto your Flashline account (1) Click on the Student Tools tab (2) Look in the Graduation Planning Tool Box (3) Click on Application for Graduation. If an error message appears, you must contact your advisor.

 

e)     The course withdrawal deadline for Fall 2014 is Sunday, November 2, 2014.


Week

Date

Topic

 

 

1

 

8/25

8/27

Chapter 1: Introduction to Operations Management

Chapter 2: Competitiveness, Strategy, and Productivity

 

2

 

9/1

9/3

Holiday

Chapter 3: Forecasting

 

3

 

9/8

9/10

Chapter 4: Product and Service Design

Test # 1: Chapters 1 – 4

 

 

4

 

9/15

9/17

Chapter 5: Strategic Capacity Planning for Products and Services

Chapter 6: Process Selection and Facility Layout

 

 

5

 

9/22

9/24

 

Chapter 7: Work Design and Measurement

Chapter 8: Location Planning and Analysis

 

 

6

 

9/29

10/1

Study for Test

Test #2: Chapters 5 - 8

 

7

 

10/6

10/8

Chapter 9: Management of Quality

Chapters 9 & 10

 

8

 

10/13

10/15

Chapter 10: Quality Control

Chapter 11: Aggregate Planning and Master Scheduling

 

 

9

 

10/20

10/22

Chapter 12: MRP

Chapter 12: ERP

 

 

10

 

10/29

11/1

Chapter 13: Inventory Management

Chapter 13: Inventory Management

 

 

11

 

11/3

11/5

Test # 3: Chapters 9 - 13

Chapter 14: JIT and Lean Operations

 

 

12

 

11/10

11/12

Chapter 15: Supply Chain Management

Chapter 16: Scheduling

 

 

13

 

11/17

11/19

Chapters 16 & 17

Chapter 17: Project Management

 

14

 

11/24

11/26

Chapter 18: Management of Waiting Lines

Holiday

 

15

 

12/1

12/3

Test #4: Chapters 14 – 18

Grading, Studying

 

Finals

12/8

Voluntary Final Exam, 12:45 PM

 

 

 

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