Georgia Tech Syllabus
Georgia Tech Syllabus
Georgia Tech Syllabus
Fall 2011
Spyros Reveliotis
e-mail: spyros@isye.gatech.edu
Homepage: www.isye.gatech.edu/~spyros
Course Objective
This course is an introduction to the concepts and problems underlying the design and operation
of contemporary production systems. Emphasis is placed on the design and operation of
manufacturing facilities, but many of the presented results apply also to the design, planning and
control of operations taking place in the service sector.
More specifically, the course seeks to offer a balanced development of the following issues:
• A systematic exposition of the design, planning and control problems that arise in the context
of the aforementioned facilities.
• A systematic introduction to inventory control theory and its application in the contemporary
production and distribution networks.
• A formal analysis of the dynamics of production processes, based on queueing theoretic
concepts and models.
• The integration of the results developed in Step 3 to the prevailing production planning and
control framework(s).
Course Prerequisites: ISYE 6650 (Probabilistic Models) and ISYE 6669 (Deterministic
Optimization)
Course Policies
Homework: Homework will be assigned upon the completion of each course unit, and it will
consist of conceptual, theoretical and computationally oriented problems. Collaboration towards
its solution is allowed, but each student must turn in his/her own work; photocopies will not be
accepted. Homework must be turned in on the specified due date.
Project: Two projects that will be based on the well-known game of Littlefield technologies will
be carried out at certain stages of the course. These projects aim to provide a more integrating
perspective for the material covered in class, and to expose the student to some of the intricacies
of the "real-world".
Exams: There will be two midterms and a final exam. Midterm I will take place upon the
completion of the first major part of the course, and Midterm II upon the completion of the
second; the detailed exam dates will be specified during the course development.
Exams will be closed-book, with 2 pages of notes allowed for each midterm and 6 pages for the
final. The final exam will be comprehensive, while the covered material for the midterms will be
specified during the course development. Naturally, it is expected that the Academic Honor Code
will be respected.
Grading:
• Homework: 10%
• Projects based on Littlefield Technologies Simulation Platform: 5%
• Two Midterms: 25% each
• Final: 35%
Notice that the textbook will have a complementary role to the material presented in class.