DocumentCode
3358364
Title
The system engineering process
Author
Boarder, John C.
Author_Institution
Cartref Consulting Syst., Oxford, UK
fYear
1995
fDate
28-30 Jun 1995
Firstpage
293
Lastpage
298
Abstract
System engineering is part of the whole engineering process; a managed process, laying down concepts, processes, organisations and management structures which other parts of engineering support. System engineering is distinguished from systems engineering so that engineering management is clear over what system engineering is for (why system engineering?), what it does, how it does it and what it uses. In addressing these issues, a framework is established aiding both system engineering and engineering management. Overall, system engineering is shown to be a goal directed process set in a business opportunity environment, driven by market requirements and addressing issues of customer and end-user need. This process has implications for educating system engineers and engineering managers. System engineering is particularly relevant to the Asia-Pacific region as an emerging trend influencing global engineering management
Keywords
engineering education; management education; systems engineering; business opportunity environment; customer need; education; end-user need; engineering management; global engineering management; goal directed process; management structures; market requirements; system engineering process; Buildings; Design engineering; Engineering management; Environmental management; Knowledge engineering; Knowledge management; Power engineering and energy; Research and development management; Systems engineering and theory; Technology management;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Engineering Management Conference, 1995. Global Engineering Management: Emerging Trends in the Asia Pacific., Proceedings of 1995 IEEE Annual International
Print_ISBN
0-7803-2799-3
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/IEMC.1995.524596
Filename
524596
Link To Document