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MicroMasters® Program in Principles of Manufacturing

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Course Features

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Duration

17 months

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Delivery Method

Online

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Available on

Limited Access

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Accessibility

Desktop, Laptop

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Language

English

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Subtitles

English

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Level

Advanced

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Effort

12 hours per week

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Teaching Type

Self Paced

Course Description

The Principles of Manufacturing MicroMasters Credential is designed by MIT, the #1-ranked Mechanical Engineering department. It teaches you the fundamental skills necessary for global manufacturing excellence and competitiveness. Apply to MIT, the world-famous Master of Engineering in Advanced Manufacturing & Design Blended Program, to get this credential and build your career.

This program gives students a foundation for understanding and controlling the rate, quality, and cost of a manufacturing company.

The Principles of Manufacturing is a collection of elements that are common to all manufacturing industries and revolve around flow and variations. These principles were developed from close collaboration with the manufacturing industry at both the operational and research levels.

This program is designed for graduate-level engineers, product developers, and technology designers who are interested in a career as advanced manufacturing professionals. It will teach learners how to apply these principles to process and product design, supply chain design, and factory operation.

This curriculum focuses on controlling flow and variation at various levels within an enterprise. It covers the following subjects:

  • Unit Process Variation Control: Modelling and controlling spatial and temporal variation in unit processes
  • Factory Level System Variation & Control: Modelling and controlling flow in manufacturing systems that have stochastic inputs and elements.
  • Supply Chain – System Variation and Control: How to operate and design optimal manufacturing-centered supply chains.
  • Business Flows Understanding how business information is used to scale up, start and run a manufacturing plant.

Course Overview

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International Faculty

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Instructor-Moderated Discussions

Skills You Will Gain

What You Will Learn

A new perspective for design and operational decision making at all levels of manufacturing, in the context of volume manufacturing, where rate, quality, cost and flexibility are the key metrics

How to operate and control unit processes to ensure maximum quality using basic and advanced statistical and feedback control methods

How to design and operate systems of processes with optimal capacity, resilience and inventory

How to design and operate optimal supply chain systems

The financial underpinnings of a manufacturing enterprise, including new ventures

Course Instructors

Stanley B. Gershwin

Senior Research Scientist

Stanley B. Gershwin is a Senior Research Scientist at the MIT Department of Mechanical Engineering. He received the B.S. degree in Engineering Mathematics from Columbia University, New York, New York...

Duane Boning

Co-Director, MIT Leaders for Global Operations Program

Dr. Duane S. Boning is the Clarence J. LeBel Professor in Electrical Engineering, and Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science in the EECS Department at MIT. He is affiliated with the...

Sean Willems

Haslam Chair in Supply Chain Analytics

Sean Willems is the Haslam Chair in Supply Chain Analytics at the University of Tennessee's Haslam College of Business. In 2000, he co-founded Optiant, a provider of multi-echelon inventory optimizat...

David Hardt

Ralph E. and Evelyn F. Cross Professor of Mechanical Engineering

Professor Hardt is a graduate of Lafayette College (BSME, 1972) and MIT (SM, PhD, 1978). He has been a member of the Mechanical Engineering faculty at MIT since 1979. His disciplinary focus is system...
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