Department of Industrial & Manufacturing Engineering & Technology
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Department of Industrial & Manufacturing Engineering & Technology
1. Course Title: IME 110 Introduction to Computers & Computational Analysis 3 Semester Hours
2. Description: Use of various modern computing technologies, including numerical analysis software and Internet-based applications. Coding of numerical algorithms as applied to engineering functions.
3. Prerequisites: MTH 115 or consent of instructor
4. Textbook: Excel 2007 Power Programming with VBA, John Walkenbach, Wiley, 2007 or equivalents Reference: Numerical Methods with VBA programming, James W. Hiestand, Jones and Bartlett, 2009 Introduction to Interactive Programming on the Internet using HTML & JavaScript, Craig D. Knuckles, Wiley, 2001
5. Course Objectives: Contributes to Student Outcomes Item Description EAC MFE A Extend student’s knowledge on modern computing environment and programming g,k
B Apply numerical methods and modeling techniques to solve engineering problems g, h C Visualize computational results effectively g
6. Topics: Contributes to Course Objectives (5) LECTURES Course Objective Internet and World Wide Web A History 1 Enabling technologies Applications HTML (Hypertext Markup Language) A Styling / Lists / Tables / Hyperlinks / Images / Frames 2 Integration with other web services : Google maps, YouTube, etc. Numerical Modeling B 3 Bisection method Curve fitting Spreadsheet C Excel built-in functions 4 Large data processing (import/export/filter/sorting) Pivot table / Chart / Table drawing/formatting
Programming in VBA (Visual Basic Application) A, C Variables / Arrays Input / Output 5 If-statement / Loops Functions / Subprograms Graphical User Interfaces (GUI) Chart /Table drawing using VBA LABORATORIES Course Objective 1 Web site building : Integration with external web services A 2 Numerical modeling B 3 Large data manipulation A 4 Data visualization : Pivot tables / Chart/Table drawing (1) by hand (2) by VBA C
PAPERS/PROJECTS Course Objective 1 Personal / Professional web site building A 2 Manufacturing/Business applications development using VBA A, B, C
7. Class Schedule: (Two 75 minute lectures per week)
8. Contribution of Course to Meeting the Professional Component: Mathematics and Basic Science 1.5 hrs Engineering Topics, Engineering Sciences, Engineering Design 1.5 hrs General Education 0.0 hrs
9. Relationship of Course to MFE Student Outcomes: (based on 1 to 5 scales, 5 denotes very strong continuation to the student outcome and blank cell denotes that the course does not continue the related student outcome) Outcom A Graduate from Industrial Engineering Program Will Have: Contribution e Manufacturing Engineering graduates will have an ability to apply knowledge of a mathematics and science to manufacturing processes, materials, and design of — manufacturing systems Manufacturing Engineering graduates will have an ability to design and conduct b experiments, and to analyze and interpret data related to manufacturing processes, — materials evaluation, and manufacturing systems Manufacturing Engineering graduates will have an ability to design, select, c implement, and control a manufacturing system and its components or processes to — meet desired needs Manufacturing Engineering graduates will have an ability to function on multi- d disciplinary teams and the ability to apply a concurrent approach and project — management to process and product development Manufacturing Engineering graduates will have an ability to identify, formulate, and e solve manufacturing engineering problems through a hands-on approach that — considers constraints, costs, benefits, and comparative processes and materials Manufacturing Engineering graduates will have an understanding of the professional f and ethical responsibilities of a manufacturing engineer — Manufacturing Engineering graduates will have an ability to effectively g 4.00 communicate technical concepts through appropriate methods Manufacturing Engineering graduates will have an understanding of the impact of h manufacturing engineering solutions in a global, economic, environmental, and 0.75 societal context Manufacturing Engineering graduates will have a recognition of the need to engage i in lifelong learning — Manufacturing Engineering graduates will have a knowledge of contemporary issues j facing manufacturing engineers — Manufacturing Engineering graduates will have an ability to use the proper k techniques, skills, and modern engineering tools necessary for manufacturing 1.00 engineering practice utilizing supporting technologies 10. Prepared by: John Yoo, 3/2013 Reviewed by: Curriculum Committee