OM 502 Course Outline Spring 2016
1
University of Alberta
Alberta School of Business
Department of Accounting, Operations and Information Systems
OM 502 Course Outline – Spring 2016
Instructor: Ramon Alanis, Ph.D.
Office: 2-33
Phone: 780.901.0560
Email: [email protected] Office hours: by appointment Required Texts:
1. Managing Business Process Flows, 3rd Ed. by Anupindi, Chopra, Deshmukh, Van Mieghem, and Zemel, Prentice Hall, 2012.
2. Course Package: A course package containing the cases will be available online for purchase and will be required.
3. The Goal: A Process of Ongoing Improvement, 25th Anniversary Edition by Eliyahu M. Goldratt, North River Press, 2012.
Class Meetings:
Schedule Location
Mon & Wed 6:30 – 9:20 PM BUS B-24
Course description: All firms must create and deliver goods or services. This course is about how that is done. The emphasis in this course is on strategic and tactical decision making in this domain so as to create competitive advantage for the organization. Specific modules include process analysis, inventory management, waiting line analysis, lean operations, and quality. A number of case studies will be used.
The operations of firms vary widely by industry and it is not possible to cover all topics associated with a single industry in this course. The topics and techniques selected for this course are applicable to a wide variety of industries.
Approach to the material: In general, we will do at least one case each week. Students must be prepared to discuss each case. In a case driven course preparation, attendance, and participation are important.
Any changes to the syllabus will be announced in class and the uLearn website well in advance.
We will follow the textbook reasonably closely so the chapters in the book will give you a rough roadmap for the semester. Some sections of the textbook are optional; these sections will be announced on the uLearn website.
Week by week, additional course materials will be posted on the uLearn website. We will use this website extensively in this course, so make sure that you check it frequently.
OM 502 Course Outline Spring 2016
2 Timetable:
Lecture Date Textbook Chapters Course Package Case Assessments
1 9-May 1,2 Intro
2 11-May 3- Little's Law Samsung
3 16-May 4- Flowtime
4 18-May 5- Capacity Kristen's Cookie Co. Assignment 1
23-May Victoria Day - No class
5 25-May Midterm Exam
6 30-May 6- Inventory National Cranberry
7 1-Jun 7- Safety Stock Assignment 2
8 6-Jun 8- Queuing I University Health Services
9 8-Jun 8- Queuing II Logan Airport Assignment 3
10 13-Jun 9- Process Control
11 15-Jun 10- Lean Operations Toyota TBD Final Exam
Evaluation: The course mark will be based on:
Assessment Weight Comments
Class Participation 5% Lectures 1 -11
Web Quizzes 5% 1 quiz per week, 5 total Assignments 1-3 30% 10% each
Midterm Exam 25% 3 hour open book exam Final Exam 35% 3 hour open book exam
Total 100%
• Class Participation grade includes: • Case questions: Each case will be accompanied by a few discussion questions to let you know what we will be talking about in reference to that case.
Questions will be posted a week ahead of when the case will be discussed. None will be accepted late.
Answer the questions quickly and specifically. Spend your time reading and thinking about the case.
Do not spend a lot of time answering the questions. They will be graded as either done poorly done or not done. It is expected that you would make a serious attempt to answer the questions.
Active participation: Students are expected to take an active part in the discussion.
• Assignments 1-3 are due at 11:59 PM on May 22th, June 5th, and June 12th (Sunday after lectures 4, 7 and 9) respectively.
• Web quizzes (The Goal): Each week you will be required to read 8 chapters from this book and answer a few multiple choice questions and/or short essays, testing whether you read the book or not. These tests will be web based quizzes to be answered out-of-class during the designated hours, every Sunday, starting the second week and for 5 consecutive weeks.
• Midterm Exam is a 3-hour in-class, open book exam on May 25th.
• Final Exam is a 3-hour open book exam. The date of the exam will be made available later.
OM 502 Course Outline Spring 2016
3 Student learning outcomes: This course is designed to develop an understanding of the following key
areas and their interrelationships:
• The core concepts in operations management,
• The key drivers of the process performance,
• Analytic methodologies for operations management analysis.
This course incorporates the Learning Goals of the MBA Program, in particular: business fundamentals, critical thinking and problem solving, communication skills, and quantitative and information processing skills. For complete descriptions of the Learning Goals of the MBA program, see:
http://business.ualberta.ca/programs/the-alberta-mba/curriculum/learning-goals
Notes:
Policy about course outlines can be found in §23.4(2) of the University Calendar.
Students who require accommodations in this course due to a disability affecting mobility, vision, hearing, learning, or mental or physical health are advised to discuss their needs with Specialized Support and Disability Services (SSDS), 2-800 Students' Union Building, 492-3381 (phone) or 492-7269 (TTY).
The University of Alberta is committed to the highest standards of academic integrity and honesty.
Students are expected to be familiar with these standards regarding academic honesty and to uphold the policies of the University in this respect. Students are particularly urged to familiarize themselves with the provisions of the Code of Student Behaviour (online at www.governance.ualberta.ca) and avoid any behaviour which could potentially result in suspicions of cheating, plagiarism, misrepresentation of facts
and/or participation in an offence. Academic dishonesty is a serious offence and can result in suspension or expulsion from the University. All assignments (except for the group activities) are to be completed individually. However, I recognize the value of studying together and comparing notes when working on assignments. To help you judge what I consider acceptable and non-acceptable collaboration, consider the following:
Do:
• Discuss the course material with other students.
• Ask classmates for help when you are stumped.
• Offer help to other students.
• Do your own work.
Don't:
• Discuss numerical answers with other students.
• Use someone else's words without proper attribution. The best way to avoid using another student's words is to never look at another student's written answers to an assignment. If you quote an article, book, web page, or any other source in your project report, then you must reference that source.
• Copy another student's assignment. There are no exceptions to this rule. Copying another student's assignment (or another group's work, for the group activities) is not acceptable, under any
circumstances. It is immaterial whether the copying is done electronically or manually.