Monday, April 30, 2012

Engineering Management Programs - USA - Curriculum and Subjects - Knol 2

Engineering Management Programs - USA - Curriculum and Subjects - Knol 2

Engineering Management Programs - USA - Curriculum and Subjects - Knol 2

Stanford University, University of the Pacific,

Authors


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Stanford University



Master’s Degree in Management Science and Engineering
September 2009
The program of Master of Science in Management Science and Engineering (MS&E) prepares
individuals for a life-long career addressing critical technical and managerial needs in private and
public decision making. Department requirements for the M.S. degree provide breadth across some of
the areas of the department, and flexibility for meeting individual objectives of depth in a particular
area of concentration. The Master’s degree may be a terminal degree program with a professional
focus, or a preparation for a more advanced graduate program. The M.S. degree can normally be
earned in one academic year (three academic quarters) of full-time work, although students may
choose to continue their education by taking additional MS&E courses beyond that year. Students
completing 15 or more units per quarter can easily complete the degree in three quarters. Students
completing 8-10 units per quarter can complete the degree in five quarters. Background requirements,
taken in addition to degree requirements, must be met by students who have had insufficient course
work in mathematical sciences, computer science, engineering and/or natural sciences.

Description of the Master’s Program
Students in the Master of Science program in MS&E must take a minimum of 45 unduplicated course
units at Stanford as follows:
• at least five core courses (breadth)
• at least three other courses in an area of concentration of their choice (depth)
• a course in probability unless a college-level course in probability has already been passed
• a project course requirement
• the remaining units in elective courses.


Some Concentrations

Energy and Environment

Course # Title Units
243 Energy and Environmental Policy Analysis 3
248 Economics of Natural Resources 3-4
264 Sustainable Product Development and Manufacturing 3
294 Climate Policy Analysis (alternate years) 3
295 Energy Policy Analysis (alternate years) 3
296 Sustainable Mobility 3
491 Real-World Clean Energy Project Development 3
CEE 207A Energy Resources 4-5
EARTHSYS 247 Controlling Climate Change in the 21st Century 3
EARTHSYS 275 The California Coast: Science, Policy, and Law 3-4
EE 293A Fundamentals of Energy Processes 3-4
EE 293B Fundamentals of Energy Processes 3-4
LAW 603 Environmental Law and Policy 3.75
MATSCI 302 Solar Cells 3
ME 260 Fuel Cell Science and Technology 3
ME 370A Energy Systems I: Thermodynamics 3
ME 370B Energy Systems II: Modeling and Advanced Concepts 3


Information Science and Technology
Course # Title Units
234 Organizations and Information Systems 4
235 Internet Commerce (alternate years) 3
237 Progress in Worldwide Telecommunications (summer only) 3
238 Network Structures and Analysis (alternate years) 3
239 Computational Advertising 3
332 Security and Risk in Computer Networks 3
335 Queuing Systems and Processing Networks 3
336 Topics in Game Theory with Engineering Applications 3
337 Information Networks (alternate years) 3
338 Advanced Topics in Information Science and Technology 3
339 Approximate Dynamic Programming 3
CS 364A Game Theory in the Internet 3
EE 284 Introduction to Computer Networks 3-4
EE 384S Network Architectures and Performance Engineering 3

Production and Operations Management

Course # Title Units
246 Game Theory with Engineering Applications 3
260 Analysis of Production and Operating Systems 4
261 Inventory Control and Production Systems 3*
262 Supply Chain Management 3
263 Internet-Enabled Supply Chains 3
264 Sustainable Product Design and Manufacturing 3-4
265 Supply Chain Logistics (alternate years) 4
266 Management of New Product Development 3-4
267 Supply Chain Risk and Flexibility Management 3
268 Operations Strategy 3
464 Global Project Coordination 3-4
Although we expect most M.S. students to select from the above list, students with exceptionally
strong analytical backgrounds may wish to take a 300-level doctoral course in this area, such as 361
through 365. These 300-level courses are also allowed as concentration courses in Production and
Operations Management.

Source

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University of Southern California


USC Master of Science in Engineering Management (MSEMT)

Program Description
 
The USC Master of Science in Engineering Management (MSEMT) program is designed for students with undergraduate degrees in engineering or related sciences to prepare them for management responsibilities. As an MSEMT student, you will learn how to lead technology projects as well as manage teams, engineering functions, and companies.  In addition, you will gain an understanding of the economic decision making processes.  More than just theory, the MSEMT program offers real world examples provided by instructors who have years of relevant industry experience, covering topics such as technology creation, management of invention, information systems, managerial accounting, and quantitative methods.  This is also a suitable program to help prospective technical entrepreneurs understand the enterprise creation process.

Distance Education Option

The USC Viterbi Distance Education Network enables students to earn their engineering Master's degree 100% online. Because the DEN program provides a fully equivalent academic experience, the degree a USC engineering student earns is the same whether they are on-campus or online. Earn the MS in Engineering Management through DEN

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University of the Pacific


Engineering management professionals deal with the planning, organization, scheduling, monitoring and control of engineering projects, and can lead to any of the following careers:

Technical Marketing – interfacing between engineers who design a product and the public who will need to understand what problems it solves and how it is used.
Project Management – interfacing between the engineers who design a project and the laborers who are building it.
Industrial Systems Engineering – overseeing and initiating technical processes in manufacturing settings.
Many students opt to continue their education by pursuing graduate degrees such as a Masters in Business Administration, Masters in Engineering Management, Masters in Public Policy or masters in other engineering fields.


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California  State university,  Northridge,


M.S. Engineering Management

The Engineering Management program at Cal State Northridge offers engineers and other technical professionals the opportunity to gain knowledge and skills pertinent to the entrepreneurial and intrapreneurial management of existing and emerging technologies.

  M.S. Program Curriculum

The goals of the Engineering Management program are to provide opportunities for:

    *       the development of technical management decision-making abilities,
    *       the acquisition of knowledge about the management of existing and emerging technologies,                                                                                         
    *       the development of technical professional employee management skills,
    *       the acquisition of knowledge of engineering cost, financial, and economic analysis, and                                                                                                        
          continued intellectual growth in a discipline-related area.


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New Jersey Institute of Technology     University Heights, Newark, New Jersey 07102

Why Pursue a Master's Degree in Engineering Management?

A recent study of leadership at Standard and Poors 500 companies shows that the most common educational background for corporate Chief Executive Officers is engineering. Some 22 percent of the CEOs at the nation's largest companies earned engineering degrees, with far higher percentages in fields such as the chemical and pharmaceutical industries, transportation, and electronics manufacturing. Advancement into managerial responsibilities is an increasingly common progression for engineers.  A graduate program in engineering management provides a technically-educated individual with skills needed to make a successful transition into a managerial role

anagement Science (3 credits)
EM 636 - Project Management (3 credits)
HRM 601 - Organizational Behavior (3 credits)
IE 673 - Total Quality Management (3 credits)
MIS 648 - Decision Support Systems for Managers (3 credits)

Specialization in Cost Engineering
12 credits as follows:

EM 632 - Legal Aspects in Construction (3 credits)
EM 637 - Project Control (3 credits)
EM 691 - Cost Estimating for Capital Projects (3 credits)
FIN 624 - Corporate Finance II (3 credits)


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