Title :
A survey of educational and training needs for transition of a product from development to manufacturing
Author :
Priest, J.W. ; Bodensteiner, Wayne ; Muir, Nan K.
Author_Institution :
Texas Univ., Arlington, TX, USA
fDate :
2/1/1994 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Serious technical problems are traditionally found when transitioning a design from development to production. A major study was conducted of over 1000 professionals from 22 high-technology companies to assess the educational and training needs of technical professionals engaged in the transition process. Of the survey, most respondents (86%) believe that a technically based and multidisciplined engineering approach is fundamental to ensure the successful transition of a design to production. Unfortunately, the survey indicates that university education and corporate training have been deficient for adequately explaining the basic engineering fundamentals behind the transition process. Over 88% of the respondents stated that “almost none to very little” course work in their university education was devoted to the underlying technical concepts and methodologies needed in the transition process. In addition, 93% stated that today´s universities are not graduating students with the knowledge of these fundamental concepts. Similar findings regarding formal corporate training were also found. Most of the respondents (78%) indicated that “almost none to very little” training in the transition process was conducted in their companies, and 84% indicated that additional or improved corporate training is needed to increase their knowledge and understanding of this critical function. The majority of the companies surveyed have not conducted or implemented formal training programs for the transition process. In summary, the respondents believed that universities and corporations have often been indifferent to the educational and training requirements of transitioning a product from design to production
Keywords :
concurrent engineering; design engineering; education; manufacture; training; corporate training; educational needs; high-technology companies; multidisciplined engineering approach; product development/manufacturing transition; technical professionals; technically based approach; training needs; university education; Costs; Design engineering; Educational products; Industrial training; Lakes; Manufacturing industries; Manufacturing processes; Production; Quality management; Risk management;
Journal_Title :
Education, IEEE Transactions on