|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Course Criteria
Add courses to your favorites to save, share, and find your best transfer school.
-
3.00 Credits
This course provides an overview of all activities in the flow of material form the supplier through the consumer. Such activities include physical supply, operations planning and control, and physical distribution. Major emphasis is place on operations planning and control. Course introduces students to the bodies of knowledge contained in the Education Society for Resource Management (APICS) certification for Production and inventory Management. Credit 3 hours.
-
1.50 Credits
This is an introductory course for production and inventory management personnel and CPIM candidates. The course provides basic definitions and concepts for planning and controlling the flow of materials into, through, and out of an organization. It explains fundamental relationships among the activities that occur in the supply chain from suppliers to customers. In addition, the course addresses types of manufacturing systems, forecasting, master planning, capacity management, production activity control, purchasing, inventory management, distribution, quality management, and just-in-time manufacturing. Credit 1.5 hours.
-
1.50 Credits
In this course, students explore processes used to develop sales and operations plans, identify and assess internal and external demand and forecasting requirements, and effect an achievable master schedule consistent with business policies, objectives, and resource constraints. The course focuses on developing and validating a plan of supply, relating management of demand to the environment and developing and validating the master schedule. Credit 1.5 hours.
-
1.50 Credits
This course focuses on material and capacity scheduling and planning. It includes a detailed explanation of material requirements planning (MRP), a technique suitable for use in job shops. The course also introduces material-dominated scheduling, which is applicable to process industries and other mature production environments. The course explains capacity requirement planning, including processor-dominated scheduling. Credit 1.5 hours.
-
1.50 Credits
This course focuses on three main areas: prioritizing and sequencing work, executing work plans, implementing controls, and reporting activity results, and evaluating and providing feedback on performance. The course explains techniques for scheduling and controlling production and process operations. It also addresses the execution of quality initiatives and continuous improvement plans as well as controlling and handling inventories. Finally, the course presents techniques for evaluating performance and collecting data for effective feedback. Credit 1.5 hours.
-
1.50 Credits
In this course, students explore the relationship of existing and emerging processes and technologies to manufacturing strategy and supply chain related functions. The course addresses three main topics: aligning resources with the strategic plan, configuring integrating operation processes to support the strategic plan, and implementing change. Credit 1.5 hours.
-
3.00 Credits
This class examines the enterprise-wide concepts for satisfying customer expectations, determining and managing customer demand, managing the transformation of demand into supply, and managing suppliers, and physical distribution. Class is part of the APICS Certified in Production and Inventory Management program. Credit 3 hours.
-
3.00 Credits
Emphasizes literature as a source of pleasure and knowledge about human experience while investigating and practicing techniques of reading, responding to, and writing about and enjoying stories. Examines some of the best works in English, American, and World literature and considers imagery, characterization, narration, and patterns in sound and sense. This course considers stories in all narrative forms. This course fulfills the humanities general education perspective. Credit 3 hours.
-
3.00 Credits
Examines a selection of literary works from the perspective of current thinking about environmental issues. The works examined portray a variety of interactions between people and environments, and readings will be informed by some key works in recent environmental theory. The course will examine the ways in which literature both reflects and helps to shape environmental attitudes and awareness. This course fulfills the humanities general education perspective. Credit 3 hours.
-
3.00 Credits
Focuses on developing reading and writing skills necessary for college level coursework. Provides a focus on the writing process, and rhetorical modes utilized in writing. Credit 3 hours.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Privacy Statement
|
Terms of Use
|
Institutional Membership Information
|
About AcademyOne
Copyright 2006 - 2025 AcademyOne, Inc.
|
|
|