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Education for the Manufacturing World of the Future (1985)

Chapter: Appendix B: Selected Bibliography

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Suggested Citation:"Appendix B: Selected Bibliography." National Academy of Engineering. 1985. Education for the Manufacturing World of the Future. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/594.
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Suggested Citation:"Appendix B: Selected Bibliography." National Academy of Engineering. 1985. Education for the Manufacturing World of the Future. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/594.
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Page 121
Suggested Citation:"Appendix B: Selected Bibliography." National Academy of Engineering. 1985. Education for the Manufacturing World of the Future. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/594.
×
Page 122
Suggested Citation:"Appendix B: Selected Bibliography." National Academy of Engineering. 1985. Education for the Manufacturing World of the Future. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/594.
×
Page 123
Suggested Citation:"Appendix B: Selected Bibliography." National Academy of Engineering. 1985. Education for the Manufacturing World of the Future. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/594.
×
Page 124
Suggested Citation:"Appendix B: Selected Bibliography." National Academy of Engineering. 1985. Education for the Manufacturing World of the Future. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/594.
×
Page 125
Suggested Citation:"Appendix B: Selected Bibliography." National Academy of Engineering. 1985. Education for the Manufacturing World of the Future. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/594.
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Page 126
Suggested Citation:"Appendix B: Selected Bibliography." National Academy of Engineering. 1985. Education for the Manufacturing World of the Future. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/594.
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Page 127

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Appendix B Selected Bibliography Abernathy, W. J., K. B. Clark, and A. M. Kantrow. 1981. The new industrial competition. Harvard Business Review 59(5):68-81. Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology. ABET. 1983. Criteria for Ac- crediting Programs in Engineering, AB-7. Available from ABET, 345 E. 47th St., New York, NY 10017. Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology. 1983. Criteria for Accrediting Programs in Engineering Technology, AB-8. Available from ABET, 345 E. 47th St., New York, NY 10017. Aerospace America. 1984. The manufacturing engineer as a national pnority. AIAA Bulletin. April:B4. American Machinist. 1981. CAM: An international comparison. American Machinist. Special Report 740. November:207-226. Argoff, N. J. 1984. Fourteen individual case studies on education and training in computerized manufacturing automation-primary school through university. Paper to be issued singly by the U.S. Office of Technology Assessment, Washington, D.C. Argots, N. J. 1984. New technology as a catalyst for American education: A flexible systems approach to American institutions. Paper commissioned by the American Enterprise Institute under a grant from the U.S. Department of Commerce. Ashburn, A. 1984. Is there a place for joint research? American Machinist. January:5. Ayres, R. U., and S. M. Miller. 1982. Robotics and Conservation of Human Resources. Technology in Society 4(3):181-197. Ayres, R. U., and S. M. Miller. 1982. Robotics: Applications and Social Implications. Cambridge: Ballinger. Ayres, R. U., and S. M. Miller. 1983. Robotic realities: Near-term prospects and problems. In R. J. Miller, ea., pp. 28-55. Baldwin, L. V. 1984. An electronic university. IEEE Spectrum 21(11):108-110. Barash, M. M. 1980. Computer integrated manufacturing systems. In L. Kops, ea., pp. 37-50. Behrman, J. N., and R. I. Levin. 1984. Are business schools doing their job? Harvard Business Review 62(1):140-147. 120

SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY 121 Bloch, E. 1984. Workplace of the future. IEEE Transactions on Industry Applications IA-20(1):8-10. Bollinger, J. G. 1980. Machinery and its control in the computer integrated manufacturing system. In L. Kops, ea., pp. 51-70. Bollinger, J. G. 1983. Computer-aided design and computer-aided manufacturing: The Wisconsin experience. In R. J. Miller, ea., pp. 95-101. Bolton, B., and J. L. Spanyol. 1984. The place of innovative and commercial skills in engineering education in the UK. IEEE Proceedings 131A(3):174-178. Bolton, M. G. 1983. Case Study: The Ben Franklin Partnership Program and Advanced Technology Center for Northeastern Pennsylvania. Paper submitted to the Workshop on Research, Technology and Regional Policy, Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, Paris, France. Botkin, J., and D. Dimancescu. 1982. Global Stakes: The Future of High Technology in America. Cambridge: Ballinger. Bothn, J., D. Dimancescu, and R. Stata. 1982. High technology, higher education, and high anxiety. Technology Review. October. Brooks, H. 1983. Technology, competition, and employment. In R. J. Miller, ea., pp. 115-122. Burgam, P. M. 1984. Going paperless: A progressive approach. Manufacturing Engi- neering 93(3):57. Business-Higher Education Forum. 1984. Corporate and Campus Cooperation: An Action Agenda. A Report by the Business-Higher Education Forum. Washington, D.C.: Business-Higher Education Forum. Business-Higher Education Forum. 1984. The New Manufacturing: America's Race to Automate. A Report by the Business-Higher Education Forum. Washington, D.C.: Business-Higher Education Forum. Center for Public Resources. 1983. Basic Skills in the U.S. Workforce. New York: Center for Public Resources. Center for Research and Advanced Study. 1982. Development of a Business Plan for Starting a Computer-Aided Pattern Grading Service Bureau for the Footwear Industry in Maine. Project No. 99-26-07125-10 funded by the U.S. Department of Commerce. Portland: University of Maine. Chartered Mechanical Engineer. 1984. Action plan for industry conclusions from the Cambridge manufacturing forum. Chartered Mechanical Engineer 31(9):83-87. Choate, P. 1982. Retooling the American Work Force Toward a National Training Strategy. Washington, D.C.: Northeast-Midwest Institute. Choate, P. 1983. Training implications of the changing economy. Paper presented at the Conference on Jobs and Skills for the Future, Appalachian Regional Commission, Jackson, Mississippi, April 12, 1983. Chubin, D. E., J. D. Roessner, and F. A. Rossini. 1983. Training and Utilization of Engineering Technicians and Technologists. Atlanta: Technology Policy and Assess- ment Center, Georgia Institute of Technology. Commission on Precollege Education in Mathematics, Science and Technology. 1983. A Revised and Intensified Science and Technology Curriculum Grades K-12 Urgently Needed for Our Future. Recommendations of the Conference on Goals for Science and Technology Education Grades K-12. Washington, D.C.: National Science Board. Committee on Vocational Education and Economic Development in Depressed Areas. 1983. Education for Tomorrow's Jobs. Commission on Behavioral and Social Sciences and Education, National Research Council. Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press.

122 APPENDIX B Committee on Women's Employment and Related Social Issues. 1984. Microelectronics and Working Women, A Literature Summary. Commission on Behavioral and Social Sciences and Education, National Research Council. Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press. Eurich, N. P. 1985. Corporate Classrooms: The Learning Business. Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. Lawrenceville, N.J.: Princeton University Press. Fano, R. M. 1982. Lifelong cooperative education. Unpublished manuscript. Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology. Fenwick, D. C., ed. 1983. Directory of Campus-Business Linkages. American Council on Education/Macmillan Series in Higher Education. New York: Macmillan. Footwear Industries of America. 1983. Survey of the state of the art in footwear manufacturing and identification of priorities and mechanisms to accelerate the development and application of advanced technology in the U.S. footwear manufac- turing industry. Technical Assistance Project No. 99-26-07124-10, funded by the U.S. Department of Commerce. Foulkes, F. K., and J. L. Hirsch. 1984. People make robots work. Harvard Business Review 62(1):94-102. Fuchi, K., S. Sato, and E. Miller. 1984. Japanese approaches to high-technology R&D. Computer 17(3): 14-18. Garvin, D. A. 1983. Quality on the line. Harvard Business Review 61(5):64-75. General Accounting Office. 1976. Manufacturing Technology A Changing Challenge to Improved Productivity. Report to the Congress by the Comptroller General of the United States. U.S. General Accounting Office, Washington, D.C. General Accounting Office. 1983. The Federal Role in Fostering University-Industry Cooperation. Document # GAO/PAD-83-22. U.S. General Accounting Office, Wash- ington, D.C. General Motors Corporation. 1984. Retraining for the Future. 1984 General Motors Public Interest Report. General Motors Corporation, Detroit, Mich. Ginzberg, E. 1982. The mechanization of work. Scientific American 247(3):39-47. Gist, L. G., and R. H. Forbes. 1982. The Information Society: Are High School Graduates Ready? Denver: Education Commission of the States. Gitlow, H. S., and P. T. Hertz. 1983. Product defects and productivity. Harvard Business Review 61(5):131-141. Glower, D. D., and L. E. Saline, eds. 1982. A Response to Advancing Technologies. Washington, D.C.: American Society for Engineering Education. Gold, B. 1980. On the adoption of technological innovations in industry: Superficial models and complex decision process. Omega 8(5):505-516. Goldhar, J. D., and D. C. Burnham. 1983. Concept of the manufacturing system: Present and future approaches. In National Academy of Engineering, pp. 92-104. Goldhar, J. D., and M. Jelinek. 1983. Plan for economies of scope. Harvard Business Review 61(6):141-148. Groff, W. H. 1983. Impacts of the high technologies on vocational and technical education. In R. J. Miller, ea., pp. 81-94. Gunn, T. G. 1982. The mechanization of design and manufacturing. Scientific American 247(3): 114-131. Halberstam, D. 1984. W. Edward Deming, the man who taught Japan about quality, believes: Yes we can! Parade, July 8, p. 4. Haller, H. D. 1984. Examples of university-industry-(government) collaborations. Unpublished manuscript. Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y.

SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY 123 Hancock, E. 1983. Academe meets industry: Charting the bottom line. Johns Hopkins Magazine. August:i. Hatvany, J. 1980. Possible Consequences of the Intensive Computerization of Industrial Production and Management: A Scenario and Annotated Bibliography. CP-80-25. Laxenburg, Austria: International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis. Hatvany, J. 1984. Intelligence and cooperation in heterarchic manufacturing systems. Paper presented at the 16th CIRP International Seminar on Manufacturing Systems, Tokyo, Japan. Hatvany, J., and F. J. Lettner. 1983. The efficient use of deficient knowledge. Annals of the CIRP 32(1):423-425. Hayes, R. H., and S. C. Wheelwright. 1979. Link manufacturing process and product life cycles. Harvard Business Review 57(1):133-140. Hayes, R. H., and S. C. Wheelwright. 1984. Restoring Our Competitive Edge: Competing Through Manufacturing. New York: John Wiley & Sons. Hayes, R. H., and W. J. Abernathy. 1980. Managing our way to economic decline. Harvard Business Review 58(4):67-77. Hetzner, W. A., L. G. Tornatzky, and K. J. Klein. 1983. Manufacturing technology in the 1980's: A survey of federal programs and practices. Management Science 29(8):951 961. Holusha, J. 1984. New ways at 2 G.M. plants. New York Times, April 10, D1, D9. IBM Corporation. 1984. A Summary of University Proposals for Master's Level Curricula in Manufacturing Systems Engineering. Boca Raton, Fla.: University Programs Department, IBM Corporation. Joint Committee on the Economic Report. 1955. Automation and Technological Change. Hearings before the Subcommittee on Economic Stabilization of the Joint Committee on the Economic Report, U.S. Congress. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office. Joint Economic Committee. 1984. New Technology in the American Machinery Industry: Trends and Implications. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office. Kaplan, R. S. 1983. Measuring manufacturing performance: A new challenge for managerial accounting research. Accounting Review 58(4):686-705. Kean, T. H. 1983. Education in New Jersey: A blueprint for reform. Speech delivered by Gov. Kean before a joint session of the legislature, September 6. Klus, J. P., and J. A. Jones, eds. 1979. Summary and Evaluation, First World Conference on Continuing Engineering Education, 1979, Mexico City, April 25-27. Madison: University of Wisconsin-Extension. Kops, L. 1980. The factory of the future-technology of management. In L. Kops, ea., pp. 109-115. Kops, L., ed. 1980. Towards the Factory of the Future: Emergence of the Computerized Factory and its Impacts on Society. Papers presented at the Winter Annual Meeting of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, Chicago, November 16-21, 1980. New York: ASME. Kranzberg, M., and J. Gies. 1975. By the Sweat of Thy Brow, Work in the Western World. New York: G. P. Putnam~s Sons. Lawson, J., J. Reidy, G. F. Renner, K. Rosen, and L. Smolak. 1983. Technology for the factory of the future. In R. J. Miller, ea., pp. 56-67. Le Cerf, B. H. 1983. GE pumps new life into an aging factory. Iron Age. May 20. Levin, H. M. 1983. Some general requirements for future work. Paper commissioned by the Committee on Science, Engineering, and Public Policy of the National Academy of Sciences, the National Academy of Engineering, and the Institute of Medicine. Washington, D.C.

124 APPENDIX B Levin, H. M., and R. W. Rumberger. 1983. The low skill future of high tech. Technology Review 86(6):18-21. Limprecht, J. A., and R. H. Hayes. 1982. Germany's world-class manufacturers. Harvard Business Review 60(6):137-145. Lohr, S. 1984. The Japanese challenge. New York Times Magazine, July 8, p. 18. Lund, L., and E; P. McGuire. 1983. Business Role in Precollegiate Education: A Survey of Impacts and Attitudes (Preliminary Report). The Conference Board, Inc., New York, N.Y. Lund, R. T. 1983. Testimony before Joint Hearings of the House Committee on Science and Technology, Science, Research and Technology Subcommittee, and the House Budget Committee Task Force on Education and Employment, June 9, 1983. Lund, R. T. 1984. Human issues in new manufacturing technology. Paper presented at the Ninth Triennial World Congress of the International Federation of Automatic Control, Budapest, Hungary, July 2, 1984. Lund, R. T. 1984. Remanufacturing. Technology Review 87(2):19-27. Lynn, L. 1983. Japanese robotics: Challenge and limited exemplar. In R. J. Miller, ea., pp. 16-27. Malstrom, E. M. 1984. Manufacturing computer applications in the factory spur corresponding efforts in the university. IEEE Spectrum. November:58-59. Manufacturing Studies Board. 1981. Improving Managerial Evaluations of Computer- Aided Manufacturing. Assembly of Engineering, National Research Council, Wash- ington, D.C. Manufacturing Studies Board. 1981. Reindustrialization or New Industrialization. Min- utes of a Symposium, January 13, 1981. Assembly of Engineering, National Research Council, Washington, D.C. Manufacturing Studies Board. 1984. Computer Integration of Engineering Design and Production A National Opportunity. Commission on Engineering and Technical Systems, National Research Council. Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. 1982. Lifelong Cooperative Education. Report of the Centennial Study Committee, Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press. McClintock, R. H. 1984. The jobs have changed, not gone. Enterprise 8(4): 16-20. McFarlan, F. W. (1984) Information technology changes the way you compete. Harvard Business Review 62(3):98-103. McGee, T. D. 1978. The decline of engineering in the United States. Engineering Education. January McLaughlin, D. B. 1983. Electronics and the future of work: The impact on pink and white collar workers. In R. J. Miller, ed. Menges, G., P. Rice, and P. Clegg. 1984. National strategies for training polymer engineers-comparing German and UK experiences. Plastics and Rubber International 9(5): 11-13. Merchant, M. E. 1980. The factory of the future technological aspects. In R. L. Kops, , ea., pp. 71-82. Merchant, M. E. 1983. Flexible manufacturing systems: Robotics and computerized automation. In R. J. Miller, ea., pp. 123-135. Miller, R. J. 1980. The transformation of the factory in the future: Social impacts of computerized factory. In L. Kops, ea., pp. 99-108. Miller, R. J. 1983. The human: Alien in the robotic environment. In R. J. Miller, ea., pp. 11-15. Miller, R. J., ed. 1983. Robotics: Future Factories, Future Workers. The Annals, Vol.

SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY 125 470 American Academy of Political and Social Science. Beverly Hills: Sage Publi- cations. Nadler, G., and G. H. Robinson. 1983. Design of the automated factory: More than robots. In R. J. Miller, pp. 68-80. National Academy of Engineering. 1981. Academe/Industry/Government: Interaction in Engineering Education. Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press. National Academy of Engineering. 1983. U.S. Leadership in Manufacturing. A Sym- posium at the Eighteenth Annual Meeting, November 4, 1982. Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press. National Academy of Engineering. 1984. Guidelines for Engineering Research Centers. A Report for the National Science Foundation. National Academy of Engineering, Washington, D.C. National Academy of Engineering. 1984. The Long-Term Impact of Technology on Employment and Unemployment. A Symposium Held on June 30, 1983. Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press. National Academy of Sciences/National Academy of Engineering. 1982. Science and Mathematics in the Schools: Report of a Convocation. Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press. National Center for Productivity and Quality of Working Life. 1978. Increasing the Contribution of Engineering Education to Manufacturing Productivity. Proceedings of the Industry-University Conference on Productivity Improvement, Provo, Utah. Available from National Technical Information Service, Springfield, Va. National Council on the Future of Women in the Workplace. 1984. The Invisible Worker in a Troubled Economy. Eleanor Holmes Norton, Study Chair. The National Federation of Business and Professional Women's Clubs, Washington, D.C. Nicholas, I., M. Warner, A. Sorge, and G. Hartmann. 1983. Computerised machine tools, manpower training and skill polarisation: A study of British and West German manufacturing firms. In Information Technologies in Manufacturing Processes-Case Studies in Technological Change, G. Winch, ed. London: Rosendale. North Carolina State University. 1983. Integrated Manufacturing Systems Institute. School of Engineering, North Carolina State University, Raleigh. O'Boyle, T. F. 1984. Brain drain: U.S. basic industries are hindered by loss of scientific talent. Wall Street Journal, July 27. Office of Technology Assessment. 1982. Exploratory Workshop on the Social Impacts of Robotics, Summary and Issues, A Background Paper. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office. Office of Technology Assessment. 1984. Computerized Manufacturing Automation: Employment, Education, and the Workplace. Volume I. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office. Office of Technology Assessment. 1984. Computerized Manufacturing Automation: Employment, Education, and the Workplace. Volume II Working Papers. Available from the National Technical Information Service, Springfield, Va. Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Research and Engineering. 1983. Report of the DOD-University Forum Working Group on Engineering and Science Education. U.S. Department of Defense, Washington, D.C. Plisko, V. W., ed. 1984. The Condition of Education. 1984 Edition. National Center for Education Statistics, U.S. Department of Education. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Gov- ernment Printing Office. Quinn, J. B. 1983. Overview of the current status of U.S. manufacturing: Optimizing U.S. manufacturing. U.S. Leadership in Manufacturing. A Symposium at the Eight

126 APPENDIX B eenth Annual Meeting, November 4, 1982. Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press. Riesenfeld, R. F. 1982. Recommendations for CAD/CAM research directions in the U.S. Unpublished manuscript. Department of Computer Sciences, University of Utah, Salt Lake City. Rosenfeld, S. A. 1983. The future of work for the high school graduate. Paper prepared for the Committee on Science, Engineering, and Public Policy of the National Academy of Sciences, National Academy of Engineering, and Institute of Medicine, Washington, D.C. Ross, G. H. B., and R. R. Turniansky. 1984. Managing Manufacturing Technologies Through the 1990's. Conference Report, February 1984. Ann Arbor, Mich.: Industrial Technology Institute. Scientific American. 1982. Special Issue on the Mechanization of Work. Vol. 247, No. 3. Skinner, W. 1980. The factory of the future: Always in the futures.- a managerial viewpoint. In L. Kops, ea., pp. 83-98. Skinner, W. 1981. Big hat, no cattle: Managing human resources. Harvard Business Review 59(5):106-114. Skinner, W. 1983. Wanted: Managers for the factory of the future. In R. J. Miller, ea., pp. 102-114. Skinner, W. 1984. The taming of lions: How manufacturing leadership evolved 1780- 1984. Research Paper on Technology and Productivity: 75th Anniversary Colloquium Series. Harvard Business School, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Smith, K. A. 1984. Industry-university research programs. Physics Today. February. Society of Manufacturing Engineers. 1984. Directory of Manufacturing Education Programs in Colleges, Universities, and Technical Institutes, 1984-85. Dearborn, Mich.: Education Department, SME. Steele, L. 1983. Manager's misconceptions about technology. Harvard Business Review 61(6): 133-140. Stimson, R. A. 1984. Industry/government/university cooperation for advancing engi- neering and management education. Speech delivered April 6 to the Bottom Line Academia II Conference, Fort McNair, Washington, D.C. Telchotz, E. 1984. Computer integrated manufacturing. Datamation 30(3):169-174. Torda, T. P. 1970. Frontiers engineers: New dimensions in education? Technology and Human Affairs. Summer. Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago. Tornatzky, L. G., W. A. Hetzner, and J. D. Eveland. 1982. Fostering the Use of Advanced Manufacturing Technology. Productivity Improvement Research Section, National Science Foundation, Washington, D.C. Tribus, M. 1982. Deming's Way. Report for the Center for Advanced Engineering Study, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, April. Tribus, M. 1984. In improving the quality and decreasing the cost of America's defense is the Department of Defense to be part of the solution or part of the problem? Speech delivered to the Bottom Line Academia II Conference, April 6, Ft. McNair, Washington, D.C. Tribus, M., and lI. H. Hollomon. 1982. Productivity who is responsible for improving it? Agricultural Engineering 63(7):10-20. Weekley, T. L. 1983. Workers, unions, and industrial robotics. In R. J. Miller, ea., pp. 146-151. Willows, P. J. 1984. Computers in manufacturing industry. Chartered Mechanical Engineer 31(3):26-27.

SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY 127 Winch, G., ed. 1983. Information Technology in Manufacturing Processes-Case Studies in Technological Change. London: Rossendale. Winter, R. E. 1984. Cincinnati Milacron unveils a computer shop floor system. Wall Street Journal, September 5. Yoshikawa, H., K. Rathmill, and J. Hatvany. 1981. Computer-Aided Manufacturing: An International Comparison. Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press.

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The clearly declining competitiveness of the United States in the world marketplace has prompted increased concern about the health of the United States' manufacturing industries. This volume is the result of lively discussions and formal presentations by industry leaders and education experts during a symposium convened by the National Academy of Engineering and the National Research Council. Issues involving the changing face of U.S. manufacturing, requirements for educating and training engineers for manufacturing careers, and the possibilities for cooperative arrangements between industry and academia are examined in-depth in an effort to improve manufacturing education and therefore move toward boosting the nation's world competitiveness in manufacturing.

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