DocumentCode
2591072
Title
Effective student engagement with advanced manufacturing concepts - a case study
Author
Kodzi, Emmanuel T., Jr. ; Haviarova, Eva ; Paul, Rimi ; Gazo, Rado
Author_Institution
Purdue Univ., West Lafayette
fYear
2007
fDate
10-13 Oct. 2007
Abstract
Assimilation of contemporary advanced manufacturing concepts has been rather slow in the US furniture industry, contributing to losses in local manufacturing competitiveness as evidenced by recent plant closures. To facilitate rapid adoption of advanced manufacturing systems in furniture production it is vital to develop corresponding levels of apposite workforce training. We investigated the impact of instructional design on the extent to which college-level students integrated advanced manufacturing concepts into the process of making furniture. Using a project-based approach in a "design for CNC manufacturing" course we crafted instruction modules to derive higher order learning outcomes based on the revised Bloom\´s Taxonomy. We assessed the degree to which two consecutive level-400 cohorts had both internalized and creatively applied the principles of advanced manufacturing in term projects over a period of one semester. Our study indicates that innovative combinations of traditional classroom learning and problem-based learning have positive learning outcomes for prospective wood products manufacturing professionals.
Keywords
education; furniture industry; industrial training; advanced manufacturing concepts; college-level students; furniture production; instructional design; manufacturing competitiveness; Educational products; Humans; Industrial training; Information technology; Machining; Manufacturing industries; Manufacturing processes; Productivity; Profitability; Pulp manufacturing; effective learning; furniture design; professional education;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Frontiers In Education Conference - Global Engineering: Knowledge Without Borders, Opportunities Without Passports, 2007. FIE '07. 37th Annual
Conference_Location
Milwaukee, WI
ISSN
0190-5848
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-1083-5
Electronic_ISBN
0190-5848
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/FIE.2007.4417965
Filename
4417965
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