Industry 4.0 learning factory didactic design parameters for industrial engineering education in South Africa

To manage the impact of Industry 4.0 on industrial engineering (IE) education curriculum requirements, realistic teaching and learning infrastructure such as a learning factory are required. This paper scans the literature to determine Industry 4.0’s principles and interactions with IE and a learnin...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sackey, S. M., Bester, A., Adams, D.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Stellenbosch University 2017-05-01
Series:South African Journal of Industrial Engineering
Subjects:
Online Access:http://sajie.journals.ac.za/pub/article/view/1584
id doaj-16bca3a6630841f5ac660e83efc0ea12
record_format Article
spelling doaj-16bca3a6630841f5ac660e83efc0ea122020-11-24T23:39:37ZengStellenbosch UniversitySouth African Journal of Industrial Engineering1012-277X2224-78902017-05-0128111412410.7166/28-1-1584Industry 4.0 learning factory didactic design parameters for industrial engineering education in South AfricaSackey, S. M.0Bester, A.1Adams, D.2Kwame Nkrumah University of Science & TechnologyCape Peninsula UniversityCape Peninsula UniversityTo manage the impact of Industry 4.0 on industrial engineering (IE) education curriculum requirements, realistic teaching and learning infrastructure such as a learning factory are required. This paper scans the literature to determine Industry 4.0’s principles and interactions with IE and a learning factory, surveys relevant universities by questionnaire to determine its current status and practices, and formulates didactic design parameters for an Industry 4.0 learning factory to support IE education in South Africa, making use of existing models of cyber-physical systems and learning factory morphology. In other results, the technical universities are discovered to be more positively disposed, in general terms, to developing an Industry 4.0 learning factory than are the traditional programmes which, with one exception, prefer computational facilities. Of ten universities that offer IE, only one — a traditional programme — has made significant progress towards creating an Industry 4.0 learning factory. http://sajie.journals.ac.za/pub/article/view/1584industrial engineering education
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sackey, S. M.
Bester, A.
Adams, D.
spellingShingle Sackey, S. M.
Bester, A.
Adams, D.
Industry 4.0 learning factory didactic design parameters for industrial engineering education in South Africa
South African Journal of Industrial Engineering
industrial engineering education
author_facet Sackey, S. M.
Bester, A.
Adams, D.
author_sort Sackey, S. M.
title Industry 4.0 learning factory didactic design parameters for industrial engineering education in South Africa
title_short Industry 4.0 learning factory didactic design parameters for industrial engineering education in South Africa
title_full Industry 4.0 learning factory didactic design parameters for industrial engineering education in South Africa
title_fullStr Industry 4.0 learning factory didactic design parameters for industrial engineering education in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Industry 4.0 learning factory didactic design parameters for industrial engineering education in South Africa
title_sort industry 4.0 learning factory didactic design parameters for industrial engineering education in south africa
publisher Stellenbosch University
series South African Journal of Industrial Engineering
issn 1012-277X
2224-7890
publishDate 2017-05-01
description To manage the impact of Industry 4.0 on industrial engineering (IE) education curriculum requirements, realistic teaching and learning infrastructure such as a learning factory are required. This paper scans the literature to determine Industry 4.0’s principles and interactions with IE and a learning factory, surveys relevant universities by questionnaire to determine its current status and practices, and formulates didactic design parameters for an Industry 4.0 learning factory to support IE education in South Africa, making use of existing models of cyber-physical systems and learning factory morphology. In other results, the technical universities are discovered to be more positively disposed, in general terms, to developing an Industry 4.0 learning factory than are the traditional programmes which, with one exception, prefer computational facilities. Of ten universities that offer IE, only one — a traditional programme — has made significant progress towards creating an Industry 4.0 learning factory.
topic industrial engineering education
url http://sajie.journals.ac.za/pub/article/view/1584
work_keys_str_mv AT sackeysm industry40learningfactorydidacticdesignparametersforindustrialengineeringeducationinsouthafrica
AT bestera industry40learningfactorydidacticdesignparametersforindustrialengineeringeducationinsouthafrica
AT adamsd industry40learningfactorydidacticdesignparametersforindustrialengineeringeducationinsouthafrica
_version_ 1725512557314179072