MGMT371-13S1 (C) Semester One 2013

Materials, Logistics and Supply Chain Management

15 points

Details:
Start Date: Monday, 18 February 2013
End Date: Sunday, 23 June 2013
Withdrawal Dates
Last Day to withdraw from this course:
  • Without financial penalty (full fee refund): Sunday, 3 March 2013
  • Without academic penalty (including no fee refund): Sunday, 19 May 2013

Description

Materials, Supply Chain and Logistics management principles and approaches. Long-term, medium-term, and short-term planning and control methods. This course focuses on inventory management through the supply chain. A mainstream course for Operations Management majors.

This course expands on the issues and processes first introduced in MSCI101 and MSCI271, in particular materials management and their associated costs.  The course then covers in depth materials management principles and tools.  Supply chain management is discussed from an inventory and materials management perspective.  Logistics management and its implications are also discussed.

This course is one of the four Stage Three Operations Management courses offered by Department of Management. It builds on the introductory material covered in MSCI270/MGMT270 and MSCI271/MGMT271. Other papers that are useful to complement an OM major are MSCI/MGMT370, MSCI/MGMT372, MSCI/MGMT373. Students taking MSCI, MGMT, ACIS and Engineering would also find this paper useful.

Workload for this course, in terms of class preparation, review, assignments, readings and examination preparation is about 10 hours per week.

Learning Outcomes

At the end of this course students should be able to:
1. Explain the relationship between ERP and MRP.
2. Explain how Materials Requirements Planning systems work and demonstrate their usage.
3. Explain the use of Just In Time systems and to be able develop a Kanban system for a new situation.
4. Demonstrate different capacity planning techniques and explain their advantages and disadvantages.
5. Demonstrate the use of appropriate scheduling techniques in different problem situations.
6. Explain the principles underlying the Theory of Constraints and to apply them to a new problem situation.
7. Explain how Distribution Requirements Planning works and how it is integrated into the Logistics system of an organisation.
8. Describe the key elements of an organisation’s logistics system and demonstrate how key logistic decisions can be made.
9. Explain the key issues in implementing production planning and control systems.
10. Describe the key issues that need to be considered when designing and implementing Supply Chains systems.
11. Demonstrate methods for controlling independent demand.

The Learning Process
It is YOUR responsibility to learn the material for this course to the standard you set for yourself.  The resources outlined below will aid you in this process, but ultimately you will get out of this course what you put into it.

The measures used to determine how successfully you have learnt the material will be outlined in an objective sheet given out at the start of each section of the course.  

Learning Resources
The material taught in this course comes primarily from the text by Jacobs et al.  This text is required reading for the course and will be your primary resource for the theory of the subject.  On-line lectures will not cover everything that is in the text, although all material in the chapters covered in the course will be examinable but the emphasis will be on that material covered in lectures.
 
The course class time will primarily be going over examples and exercises to teach the concepts behind the theory.  You are expected to view the on-line lectures and read the text BEFORE the class time.  This will be critical to your learning.  Class time will be interactive and hands on.  If you do not prepare for and participate in class you will miss the main benefit of them.  

The library provides many different resources, including many other texts on materials management. Remember when using these resources for your assignment, that full referencing is required.

This course uses 'LEARN' as a means of distributing lectures, notes, assignments and previous examples of test and examinations.  This system will also be used to submit all assessments and provide a means of giving feedback.

Prerequisites

(1) one of MSCI220 or MSCI270 or MGMT270 and (2) one of MSCI221 or MSCI271 or MGMT271

Restrictions

MSCI321, MSCI371

Equivalent Courses

Course Coordinator / Lecturer

Ross James

Assessment

Assessment Due Date Percentage  Description
In-classTest 18 Mar 2013 15% In-class Test
Assignment 15 May 2013 20% Assignment
Final Examination 55% Final Examination
Participation (No Aegrotats) 10% Participation (No Aegrotats)


The test and the final exam are open book/open notes.  Electronic calculators are required. The final examination is integrative and covers all lecture and tutorial materials and all assigned readings.

Late Assignments
Assignments submitted after the due date without an extension being granted by the Lecturer will have 10% of the mark deducted for every day or part day the assignment is late. Assignments will not be accepted for marking if the assignment is submitted any later than 5 days after the due date.

Grading
Your final mark will be calculated after the raw marks have been standardised.

Textbooks / Resources

Required Texts

Jacobs, F. Robert; Manufacturing planning and control for supply chain management ; 6th ed; McGraw-Hill/Irwin, 2011.

Note: The 5th Edition of the text can be used for this course.

Notes

Class Representative
A class representative may be asked to volunteer in the first few weeks of class. Any problems with the course can be raised with the class rep. Their email can be found at UCSA The class representative will take up any issues raised by class members with the lecturer concerned as they occur.

Departmental Academic Policies The Department assumes that you have read this document.

You should also read the General Course and Examination Regulations

Dishonest Practice
The University of Canterbury considers cheating and plagiarism to be serious acts of dishonesty.  All assessed work must be your own individual work unless specifically stated otherwise in the assessment guidelines. Material quoted from any other source must be clearly acknowledged. You must not copy the work of another person (student or published work) in any assessment including examinations, tests and assignments. Any person, who is found to have copied someone else's work, or to have allowed their work to be copied, will receive a fail grade for that piece of assessment and may face disciplinary action which may lead to a fine, community service or exclusion from the university.

IMPORTANT: Where there are concerns regarding the authorship of written course work, a student can be required to provide a formal, oral explanation of the content of their work.

Coversheets - Group and Individual

Indicative Fees

Domestic fee $682.00

International fee $3,000.00

* All fees are inclusive of NZ GST or any equivalent overseas tax, and do not include any programme level discount or additional course-related expenses.

For further information see Management, Marketing and Tourism .

All MGMT371 Occurrences

  • MGMT371-13S1 (C) Semester One 2013