Team-composition methodologies for manufacturing engineering technology program projects

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Abstract

The ability to work effectively as a member of a team has always been an integral component of a manufacturing engineering professional's skill set, but never more so than now. Incorporation of practices such as lean manufacturing and third-party certification into companies' standard operating procedures have heightened the awareness among employers of the desirability of socalled "soft skills" in their prospective employees. Consequently, teamwork is more a fundamental part of modern manufacturing-related curricula than ever before as well. However, the best way to impart soft-skill lessons, especially in hard-skill fields, is open to debate, especially in the academic environment where outcomes assessment is stressed. Factors such as the size of classes, complexity of projects, strengths versus weaknesses of class members, diversity initiatives in place, and many other dynamics may play a role in the formation of project teams. Simultaneously addressing the needs of each individual student, the needs of the class as a whole, and needs of industrial partners is a delicate balancing act that calls first and foremost for careful consideration of all pertinent factors, followed by insightful decisions and proper monitoring. This paper addresses methods of forming project teams in on-campus courses delivered by traditional methodology in the Ferris State University B.S. program in Manufacturing Engineering Technology. It discusses our different approaches to team composition including their pluses and minuses, application of those methods in various courses at Ferris, assessment techniques of those team exercises, and suggestions for improving the process. © American Society for Engineering Education, 2007.

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APA

Rumpf, J. (2007). Team-composition methodologies for manufacturing engineering technology program projects. In ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition, Conference Proceedings. American Society for Engineering Education. https://doi.org/10.18260/1-2--2057

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