3 ECTS credits
87 h study time
Offer 1 with catalog number 3019731DNW for working students in the 1st semester
at
a (D) Master - preliminary level.
- Semester
- 1st semester
- Enrollment based on exam contract
- Impossible
- Grading method
- Grading (scale from 0 to 20)
- Can retake in second session
- Yes
- Enrollment Requirements
- To be able to enroll for 'Introduction to Informatics and Supply Chain Management' it is necessary to have succesfully passed for 'Quantative Methods for Business' or at least you need to be enrolled for 'Quantative Methods for Business'.
- Taught in
- English
- Faculty
- Faculty of Social Sciences & SolvayBusinessSchool
- Department
- Business Technology and Operations
- Educational team
- Sam Verboven
Yves Molenbruch
(course titular)
- Activities and contact hours
-
15 contact hours Lecture
3 contact hours Seminar, Exercises or Practicals
69 contact hours Independent or External Form of Study
- Course Content
The module 'Supply Chain Management' introduces the operations environment of a supply chain with a focus on manufacturing and quality management.
The following is an indicative description of the content of the SCM part:
- Manufacturing processes
- Layout decision models
- Trends to improve performance in operations (Six sigma, Lean management, Continuous improvement tools,…)
- Quality management
- Statistical quality control
The IT part of the course introduces the basic concepts related to information systems and their use in business, with examples in supply chain management and more. The following is an indicative description of the content of the IT part:
- Information systems in global business today
- IT infrastructuring and emerging tech
- Networking: telecom & internet
- Data: databases and foundations of business intelligence
- Ethics, privacy and societal challenges of IT
- Course material
- Digital course material (Required) : Handouts, papers and supplementary course material, Online learning system
Digital course material (Required) : Exercises and supplementary exercise material, Online learning system
Handbook (Recommended) : Introduction to Operations and Supply Chain Management, Cecil B. Bozarth and Robert B. Handfield, 5th Edition, Pearson, 9781292291581, 2019
Handbook (Recommended) : Management Information Systems, Managing the Digital Firm, Jane P. Laudon and Kenneth C. Laudon, 15th Edition, Pearson, 9781292296562, 2019
- Additional info
Additional course material (articles, webpages, etc.) will be made available through the online learning platform.
Teaching Methods
- Lecture: collective contact-dependent moments during which the lecturer engages with learning materials
- Seminar, Exercises or Practicals (Practical): collective or individual contact-dependent moments during which the students are guided to actively engage with learning materials
- Independent or External Form of Study (Self): independent study
The description of the teaching methods below is indicative, in order to assess the expected study load.
PART SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT
Lecture: 6 hours (2 x 3 hours)
Practical: 3 hours (1 x 3 hours)
Self: 23 hours
- keeping up with the course material during the semester and run through background info, amounting to 3 hours per lecture: 6 hours (2 x 3 hours)
- processing and preparation of the practical session at home, amounting to 3 hours per practical: 3 hours
- preparation exam: 16 hours (2 days of 8 hours)
PART IT
Lecture: 6 hours (2 x 3 hours)
Self: 26 hours
- keeping up with the course material during the semester and run through background info, amounting to 3 hours per lecture: 6 hours (2 x 3 hours)
- independent study of chapter "Ethics, privacy and sociatal challenges of IT": 4 hours
- preparation exam: 16 hours (2 days of 8 hours)
PART SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT & IT
Guest Lecture: 3 hours (1 x 3 hours)
Self: 20 hours
- keeping up with the course material during the semester and run through background info, amounting to 3 hours per lecture = 3 hours (1 x 3 hours)
- understanding the guest lecture so that the student can describe at the exam the case presented based on concepts covered during the classes (17 hours)
- Learning Outcomes
-
General competencies
- Students can explain the basic concepts of Manufacturing and Quality Management with the right vocabulary.
- Students can discriminate between different manufacturing processes
- Students can elaborate on the trends in the management of the operations environment of a supply chain.
- Students can use different tools to manage performance and quality in the operations.
- Students can explain the basic concepts of information systems and their value to businesses.
- Students can discriminate between different computer systems: from CPU to cloud computing and the management implications thereof.
- Students can elaborate on IT challenges with regard to security, ethics and societal issues.
- Students can translate the material seen in class into practice, through a case study.
- Grading
-
The final grade is composed based on the following categories:
Written Exam determines 100% of the final mark.
Within the Written Exam category, the following assignments need to be completed:
- Written Exam
with a relative weight of 100
which comprises 100% of the final mark.
- Additional info regarding evaluation
The written exam covers the material discussed during the lectures, the guest lecture and the exercise session and in self study of the parts on IT and SCM. The exam may consist of multiple choice questions, open questions, exercises, etc. Marks on multiple choice questions may be corrected for guessing.
The IT and SCM part of the exam are each on 35 points. The two parts each make up 70 points of the total mark, but only if the student obtains at least 12/35 on each part. If not, the lowest partial grade denotes the score for both parts. For example, if you have a 15/35 and a 25/35 then your total mark is 40/70. Should you have a 10/35 and a 30/35 then the final score will be 20/70. This is to avoid too much of an imbalance in the learned knowledge.
The common part SCM & IT of the exam is scored on the remaining 30 points, making for 100 points in total.
Partial results can be transferred to a subsequent exam period only within the same academic year.
Academic context
This offer is part of the following study plans:
Preparatory Programme Master of Science in Management: Academische Master
Preparatory Programme Master of Science in Management: Academische Bachelor