6/74012
SCHEDULING AND PLANNING
FALL 2001
INSTRUCTOR: Professor Marvin D. Troutt
OFFICE: A426 BSA
PHONE: 330-672-1145 (V-mail), 330-672-0487 (Home)
E-MAIL: mtroutt@bsa3.kent.edu
CLASS: 12:15 – 1:30; T-R; 205 BSA or mutual arrangement
OFFICE HOURS: To be announced
COURSE DESCRIPTION: An introduction to production planning and scheduling models used to solve real-world problems. Included are aggregate planning, nonlinear cost, production and work force smoothing, adaptive, multistage models and pull systems (JIT,OPT). Prerequisite: BAD 6/74003.
ADVANCED TOPICS: Some or all of the following advanced topics will also be contacted: Bottleneck Analysis and The Theory of Constraints (TOC), Cost Estimation, Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Systems.
COURSE STYLE: Lectures, Student Talks, Projects and Term Papers. There will be one test. This will be a graduate seminar class.
TEXTS: No text will be required. Lectures and readings will be based on several texts and articles.
COURSE POINTS: Exam 100
Talks 100
Paper 100
Total 300
GRADING: A = Excellent, B = Average, C = Poor.
The Following Policies Apply to All Students in this
Course
A. Students
attending the course who do not have the proper prerequisite risk being
deregistered from the class.
B. Students have responsibility to ensure they are properly enrolled in
classes. You are advised to review your
official class schedule 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
September 7, 2001 to correct it with your advising office. 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.
C. 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. 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.
D. For Fall 2001
the course withdrawal deadline is Saturday, November 3, 2001. Withdrawal before the deadline results in a
"W" on the official transcript; after the deadline a grade must be
calculated and reported.
E.
Students with disabilities:
In accordance with University policy, if you have a documented
disability and require accommodations to obtain equal access in this course,
please contact the instructor at the beginning of the semester or when given an
assignment for which an accommodation is required. Students with disabilities must verify their eligibility through
the Office of Student Disability Services (SDS) in the Michael Schwartz Service
Center (672-3391).