scispace - formally typeset
Open Access

Enhancing faculty competency in lean thinking bodies of knowledge

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In this paper, the authors report that instructors have significantly improved their competency to teach Lean Thinking during their affiliation with the Lean Aerospace Initiative's (LAI EdNet) educational network.
Abstract
The Lean Aerospace Initiative’s (LAI) Educational Network (EdNet) established in 2002 is comprised of 32 universities who share a common interest to collaborate on developing and deploying curriculum for teaching lean six sigma fundamentals. Supported by a small staff centered at MIT, collaborating faculty have developed a week-long LAI Lean Academy® course, and delivered it to multiple audiences on-campus and in industry and government. The topics of the course map to many CDIO syllabus topics, and the pedagogy and assessment methods have borrowed on the CDIO knowledge base. This paper reports on this undertaking and on the extent to which it has contributed to developing faculty competency for teaching Lean Thinking in engineering and management. Results from this study reveal that instructors have significantly improved their competency to teach Lean Thinking during their affiliation with the LAI EdNet. On average, the instructors’ proficiency in twelve Lean Enterprise knowledge areas has increased a full level, from 3.2 to 4.2, on the CDIO Syllabus MIT Activity Based Proficiency Scale. The instructors report that collaboration on conceiving, developing and implementing the curriculum has been the most valuable EdNet activity for increasing their competency.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters

The Lean Production multidisciplinary: from operations to education

TL;DR: In this article, the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology (NFST) provided a grant for the Portuguese Pest-OE/EME/UI0252/2011 project.

Teaching Lean Thinking Principles Through Hands-on Simulations

TL;DR: In this paper, a rich simulation of an enterprise with a structure and problems typical of the US aerospace industry is used as a teaching tool, which allows students to understand Lean Enterprise Thinking at an intuitive level, and practice lean tools in a realistic setting.

Active Learning Strategies for Teaching Lean Thinking

TL;DR: Active learning as discussed by the authors is a method of designing instruction so that classroom students are actively involved in learning concepts and content, instead of casting students into the role of passive listener, active learning techniques strive to engage learners in reading, writing, discussing and doing things to connect the learners to the material.
Journal ArticleDOI

An initiative for integrating problem-based learning into a lean manufacturing course of an industrial engineering graduate program

TL;DR: In this article, a blended proposal that combines traditional teaching methods to problem-based learning (PBL) approach based on real problems of companies undergoing a lean implementation is presented, with an example of introducing it in a Brazilian federal university.
References
More filters
Book

The Machine That Changed the World

TL;DR: A 5-million-dollar 5-year study on the future of the automobile industry was conducted by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) as mentioned in this paper, which was based on the International Motor Vehicle Program (IMVP).
Journal ArticleDOI

Transferring, Translating, and Transforming: An Integrative Framework for Managing Knowledge Across Boundaries

TL;DR: The paper examines managing knowledge across boundaries in settings where innovation is desired and how this relates to the common knowledge that actors use to share and assess each other's domain-specific knowledge.
Journal Article

The machine that changed the world

Bengt Klefsjö
- 01 Jan 2008 - 
Book

Lean Enterprise Value: Insights from MIT's Lean Aerospace Initiative

TL;DR: The 21st Century Challenge: HIGHER, FASTER, FARTHER The 21st century Challenge The Cold War Legacy Monuments and Misalignments PART II: BETTER, Faster, Faster and Cheaper? Lean Thinking Islands of Success Lean Enterprises PART III: CREATING ENTERPRISE VALUE A Value Creation Framework Program Value Corporate and Government Value National and International Value Future Value: A US Aerospace Perspective
Related Papers (5)