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EDEN IN OPERATIONS & PRODUCTION MANAGEMENT |
The programme in Operations & Production Management will include seminars on the following topics :
- Research Methodology in Operations Management
- Technology Management
- Project Management
Prof. Pär AHLSTRÖM, Chalmers University of Technology, Göteborg, Sweden
Prof. Pär AHLSTRÖM, Chalmers University of Technology, Göteborg, Sweden
Prof. Will BERTRAND, Eindhoven University of Technology, the Netherlands
Prof. David COGHLAN, University of Dublin, Ireland
Prof. Paul COUGHLAN, University of Dublin, Ireland
Prof. Cipriano FORZA, University of Modena e Reggio Emilia, Italy
Prof. Jan FRANSOO, Eindhoven University of Technology, the Netherlands
Prof. Rui SOUSA, Universidade Catolica Portuguesa, Porto, Portugal
Monday February 6
Prof. Pär Ahlström : Introduction to Research Methodology in OM
Session 1 : Choosing a topic Examining and synthesizing the literature. Developing research hypotheses and propositions. Conducting a test of the validity of the proposal.
Session 2 : Locating the topic within the field of operations management The conceptual framework. Antecedent literature, concepts and theories. Choosing and managing the supervisor.
Session 3 : Funding, industrial support and access for empirical study The importance of access. Time and resources for research. Thinking about funding.
Session 4 : Theory in OM The nature of theory. Paradigms and epistemology. Emerging trends in OM
Session 5 : Research methodology Choices and approaches. Qualitative and quantitative methods. Locating your methodology. Validity.
Tuesday February 7
Prof. Cipriano Forza : Surveys
Session 6 : Introduction Survey research in OM. Appropriateness of survey.
Session 7 : Research design Purpose of the study and types of investigation. Unit of analysis. Time horison. Population, population frame and population sample. Sampling designs.
Session 8 : Data gathering (comparison of different methods) Mail-out questionnaires. In-person structured interviews. Telephone surveys
Session 9 : Questionnaire design Wording. Scaling-coding-categorizing. General appearance.
Session 10 : Measurement of variables Operational definition of variables. Measure validity. Measure reliability.
Session 11 : Data analysis Getting data ready for analysis. Obtaining a feel for data. Check goodness of data. Test hypotheses. Brief presentation of statistical techniques used in OM.
Session 12: Presentation and discussion of results Presenting information to allow future replications or meta-analyses. Interpretation of the analyses in the context of the hypotheses.Discussion of the implications.
Session 13 : Workshop Presentations and critical analysis of each survey-based participant's research plan with reference to research design, population and sampling, method of data gathering, questionnaire design, measurement of variables, and process of data analysis.
Wednesday February 8
Prof.J. Will Bertrand & Jan C. Fransoo : Models and simulation
Session 14 : History of Quantitative Modeling in Operations Management (Will Bertrand) The development of Operations Management from the discipline of Operational Research; role of quantitative modeling in (European) Operational Research vs (American) Operations Research; implications for current OM Research
Session 15 : Methodology in Quantitative Modeling (Jan C. Fransoo) Developing a formal model of an operational process, verification of the model (internal consistency) and validation of the model in view of the research questions (external consistency)
Session 16: Opportunities and Limitations with Quantitative Modeling (Will Bertrand / Jan Fransoo) Work on a case that has been modeled using Systems Dynamics Modeling
Thursday February 9
Prof. Paul Coughlan & David Coghlan : Action research
Session 17 : What is Action Research ? What type of research is this? How is it set up and structured? What is the process? What role do researchers play? What are the outcomes, in terms of action for the companies involved and theory generation? What difficulties and obstacles arise, in terms of both the actions for the companies and the generation of theory?
Session 18 : Experiential Activity, Reflection and Feedback The process of operational improvement. Reflection on the running operation from a number of perspectives.
Session 19: Action Planning and Research Planning What is the context and purpose? What data have been gathered? What actually happened? What actions and clinical interventions are in prospect? How to analyse the data. What theories can make sense of what took place? What working hypotheses are emerging?
Session 20: Action Research in Organisational Systems – Action Research Theory When can action research be used? What is needed before entering into action research?
Session 21: Action Research in Organisational Systems – Planning an Action Research Project Designing an action research project? Implementing action research. Action research skills. Generating theory. Assessing the quality of action research.
Friday February 10
Prof. Rui Sousa : Case studies
Session 22: Introduction to case studies What is a case study - the commonalties with differences between teaching and research case
Session 23: When to use cases Strengths and weaknesses of the case approach. Single versus multiple cases. Triangulation with other methods. Selection of cases - replication versus sampling logic.
Session 24: Case methodology Choice of data to be collected. Data collection methods. Interviewing strategies. Use of secondary data. Validation. Key references - e.g. Yin.
Session 25: Examples of case research Review of published case based research. Different styles and methods used. How it was conducted and written. How conclusions were drawn and related to theory and practice development.
Session 26: Case analysis Methods for analysing case data. Dealing with and exploiting the richness of case research. Dealing with small sample sizes. Developing generalisable conclusions from case data.
TIME AND LOCATION The seminar will be held at the EIASM - BRUSSELS. The programme will start on February 6, 2006 and is scheduled to end February 10, 2006 PARTICIPATION FEE The participation fee is 1500 €. This fee includes participation to the seminar, the documents, lodging and full board. Doctoral students will be assigned rooms for two. Should you wish a single room, an extra fee of 25 € per night will be charged to you. Cancellations made before January 16, 2006 will be reimbursed with 10% deduction of the total fee. No reimbursement will be possible after this date. EIASM SCHOLARSHIPS The Institute offers a limited number of scholarships of 700 € each. Scholarships are strictly limited to students coming from an EIASM Institutional Member (the Academic Council). Allocation of the scholarships is entirely at the discretion of the European Institute. APPLICATIONS Interested doctoral students should register online (and add the required documents) no later than December 12, 2005. Besides doctoral students, other researchers may participate. The number of participants will be limited to create a stimulating environment. The selection among the applicants will be conducted by the Institute’s Faculty. They will review the following documents which should necessarily complement each application form: - the applicant’s curriculum vitae demonstrating his/her capabilities of doing research ;
- a letter of recommendation of his/her local faculty supporting the application ;
- a two-page description of his/her doctoral research, indicating the general objectives.
For more information, please contact:
The EDEN Team
EIASM - Rue FOSSÉ AUX LOUPS - 38 - BOX 3 - 1000 BRUSSELS - BELGIUM
Tel: +32 2 226 66 69
Email: eden@eiasm.be
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