Lecture Notes, Slides, and other Handouts

This page provides a public repository of the materials for ME 370. Do not just rely on this public web site. Additional materials, especially those with copyright restrictions are provided via links on the D2L web site. This public site provides more convenient maintenance of web links (an advantage for me, not for you), and in prevents the course materials from being unnecessarily hidden from view.

Lecture 0: Before the first class meeting

To prepare for the first class meeting, please read the following items

Lecture 1: Introduction and Career Planning

Reading

To prepare for class meeting number 2, read the following and complete the on-line reading quiz

Supplemental Reading

You may also find the following interesting, thought it is not required

Lecture Slides and Handouts

Homework

Refer to the homework page for more details.

Lecture 2: Career Planning and Professional Communication

Announce

Lecture Slides and Handouts

Lecture 3: Email exercise and guest lecture by Frank Goovaerts

Reading

Homework: Individual Assignment 02

Lecture 4: Introduction to Intellectual Property

Announce

Reading

Read Chapter 12 in Citizen Engineer, Intellectual Property Law Fundamentals, which provides a comprehensive overview of the material presented in the lecture videos.

Video Segments of Lecture Slides

After you watch each of the following video segments, review the study questions which are designed to help you review the concepts presented in the videos.

Lecture Slides and Handouts

You can download single file version of the Lecture Slides used in the video segments. The single file version has some slight differences including two new slides (#27 and #28) on First to File and the International Patent Cooperation Treaty

Homework: Individual Assignment 02 -- same as last week

Supplemental Notes

Lecture 5: Innovation

Lecture Slides

Note: Lecture slides posted here have been updated since they were used in class. The new version of the slides have (1) a better introduction to the linear model of innovation, (2) a brief explanation of the "fail fast" idea and the minimum viable product, and (3) a two-slide summary at the end. Slides were updated again in Sept 2015 to include articles questioning the utility of Christensen's widely accepted theory of disruptive innovation.

Supplemental notes

Homework

Lecture 6: Innovation wrap-up; Introduction to Engineering Ethics

Lecture Slides, Links and Handouts

Lecture notes on "what you should know about innovation"

Extra Reading

On Paro Robots

Robots in Manufacturing

Lecture 7: ASME Code of Ethics

Lecture Slides, Links and Handouts

Extra Reading

In the News

And as automakers drove down costs using "just-in-time" production — which require parts to arrive at assembly plants only as they are required — Takata was under pressure to meet intense delivery schedules, they said. Workers were often told that if a client like Honda or Toyota was required to stop production at their plants because of a late Takata shipment, the parts supplier would be fined tens of thousands of dollars for every minute of lost production.

"That put a lot of pressure and incentive on us to never miss a shipment," said one of the former managers. "I'd argue, 'what if my daughter bought the car with the bad airbag?' But the plant would tell us, 'Just ship it.' "

Lecture 8: Ethical Frameworks, Moral Reasoning and Case Studies

Lecture Slides

Reading about sexism, ethics, and free advice from guys

Clay Shirky's rant

Clay Shirky gives advice to women about how to be more successful in the business world and how to get a job

and responses

Sexism in Performance Evaluations

Lecture 9: What's Next? and Introduction to Sustainability

Lecture Slides and handouts

Reading

Lecture 10: Engineering careers redux, and Implication of Mass Automation

Lecture Slides

Reading

Links to technology demonstrations

Extra Reading