The management of quality function deployment in a MEder's programme
At attainment of independence in 1980 the Zimbabwe Government adopted an egalitarian approach to the provision of education. Primary education was made compulsory and by 2008, the number of primary schools had increased by 136.98% and enrolments by 1980.38%. At the secondary school level the number...
Main Author: | |
---|---|
Other Authors: | |
Language: | en |
Published: |
2016
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/2263/52949 Matorera, D 2016, The management of quality function deployment in a MEder's programme, PhD Thesis, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, viewed yymmdd <http://hdl.handle.net/2263/52949> |
id |
ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-up-oai-repository.up.ac.za-2263-52949 |
---|---|
record_format |
oai_dc |
collection |
NDLTD |
language |
en |
sources |
NDLTD |
topic |
UCTD |
spellingShingle |
UCTD Matorera, Douglas The management of quality function deployment in a MEder's programme |
description |
At attainment of independence in 1980 the Zimbabwe Government adopted an egalitarian
approach to the provision of education. Primary education was made compulsory and by
2008, the number of primary schools had increased by 136.98% and enrolments by
1980.38%. At the secondary school level the number of schools increased by 1132.77% with
enrolment galloping to a figure of 1155.74%. At pre-university level student enrolments shot
to 1125.86%. The ripple effect propagated right into higher education, putting constraints on
quality of academic staff, quality and supply of resources, and the content and processes of
management, leadership and instruction. A gradual reduction in State funding and its total
withdrawal for postgraduate level forced universities to device own self-funding strategies.
To meet the multiplicity of demands from multiple stakeholders the Chinhoyi University of
Technology Graduate Business School (CUTGBS) adopted a QFD approach.
The purpose of the case study was to assess and evaluate the response of a university
business school (CUTGBS) to a QFD-based model for assuring quality in a structured
master s degree programme. A multi-method approach that included in-depth interviews,
focus groups, documents analyses and observations was used to assess and evaluate the
response of staff in the CUTGBS to the model and to the manner in which the model was
rolled out. Interviews involved academics, non-academic staff, students, alumni and senior
managers within the CUTGBS. Interviews were also held with staff in the Ministry of Higher
Education and Training, industry, and the Zimbabwe Council on Higher Education
(ZimCHE), the national quality assurance agency.
The purpose of the study was to contribute to our understanding of how staff in the
educational services sector respond to Business-based quality models by assessing and
evaluating the adoption of QFD in a university Business School. A better understanding of
quality management in terms of the tools and stages of the QFD model should create a new
dimension of quality management in higher education against the domains of context, inputs,
processes and market-orientation. The CUTGBS took a structured and deliberative approach in the adoption of QFD. A coreteam
of permanently employed academics and non-pedagogic staff constituted the core QFD
team which had the key strategic role for the CUTGBS. There were evidences of team-workquality
on the parameters proclaimed by Hoegl and Gemeunden (2001). The CUTGBS staff
participated in running Voice of Customer based on a Six Sigma paradigm. There was
marginal use of Affinity Diagram, Tree Diagram and Kano s model in the treatment of Voice
of Customer, a situation that has the danger of skewing decisions in favour of the
domineering members of the team. However in situations of ideal speech situation
(Harbermas, 1995) and deliberative democracy (Gutmann and Thompson, 2004) it has the
advantage of deep-going aspect-by-aspect deliberations. Much of the normative and
regulative requirements of the quality assurer were treated as voice of market and thus
escalated to the CUTGBS policy regime.
Student Evaluation of Teaching Effectiveness (SETE) were used for Customer Satisfaction
Performance evaluations, Goal Setting, and for scoping Target Value within the QFD
paradigm. In essence QFD was adopted creatively and implemented on a selective
incremental approach.
Being a case study, the findings of this study have an indicative rather than a conclusive
value. However the validation study indicated the feasibility of using QFD as a quality
assurance model within the higher education system. === Thesis (PhD)--University of Pretoria, 2016. === Science, Mathematics and Technology Education === PhD |
author2 |
Fraser, William John |
author_facet |
Fraser, William John Matorera, Douglas |
author |
Matorera, Douglas |
author_sort |
Matorera, Douglas |
title |
The management of quality function deployment in a MEder's programme |
title_short |
The management of quality function deployment in a MEder's programme |
title_full |
The management of quality function deployment in a MEder's programme |
title_fullStr |
The management of quality function deployment in a MEder's programme |
title_full_unstemmed |
The management of quality function deployment in a MEder's programme |
title_sort |
management of quality function deployment in a meder's programme |
publishDate |
2016 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/2263/52949 Matorera, D 2016, The management of quality function deployment in a MEder's programme, PhD Thesis, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, viewed yymmdd <http://hdl.handle.net/2263/52949> |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT matoreradouglas themanagementofqualityfunctiondeploymentinamedersprogramme AT matoreradouglas managementofqualityfunctiondeploymentinamedersprogramme |
_version_ |
1718500428397674496 |
spelling |
ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-up-oai-repository.up.ac.za-2263-529492017-07-20T04:12:26Z The management of quality function deployment in a MEder's programme Matorera, Douglas Fraser, William John mgdouglas@ymail.com UCTD At attainment of independence in 1980 the Zimbabwe Government adopted an egalitarian approach to the provision of education. Primary education was made compulsory and by 2008, the number of primary schools had increased by 136.98% and enrolments by 1980.38%. At the secondary school level the number of schools increased by 1132.77% with enrolment galloping to a figure of 1155.74%. At pre-university level student enrolments shot to 1125.86%. The ripple effect propagated right into higher education, putting constraints on quality of academic staff, quality and supply of resources, and the content and processes of management, leadership and instruction. A gradual reduction in State funding and its total withdrawal for postgraduate level forced universities to device own self-funding strategies. To meet the multiplicity of demands from multiple stakeholders the Chinhoyi University of Technology Graduate Business School (CUTGBS) adopted a QFD approach. The purpose of the case study was to assess and evaluate the response of a university business school (CUTGBS) to a QFD-based model for assuring quality in a structured master s degree programme. A multi-method approach that included in-depth interviews, focus groups, documents analyses and observations was used to assess and evaluate the response of staff in the CUTGBS to the model and to the manner in which the model was rolled out. Interviews involved academics, non-academic staff, students, alumni and senior managers within the CUTGBS. Interviews were also held with staff in the Ministry of Higher Education and Training, industry, and the Zimbabwe Council on Higher Education (ZimCHE), the national quality assurance agency. The purpose of the study was to contribute to our understanding of how staff in the educational services sector respond to Business-based quality models by assessing and evaluating the adoption of QFD in a university Business School. A better understanding of quality management in terms of the tools and stages of the QFD model should create a new dimension of quality management in higher education against the domains of context, inputs, processes and market-orientation. The CUTGBS took a structured and deliberative approach in the adoption of QFD. A coreteam of permanently employed academics and non-pedagogic staff constituted the core QFD team which had the key strategic role for the CUTGBS. There were evidences of team-workquality on the parameters proclaimed by Hoegl and Gemeunden (2001). The CUTGBS staff participated in running Voice of Customer based on a Six Sigma paradigm. There was marginal use of Affinity Diagram, Tree Diagram and Kano s model in the treatment of Voice of Customer, a situation that has the danger of skewing decisions in favour of the domineering members of the team. However in situations of ideal speech situation (Harbermas, 1995) and deliberative democracy (Gutmann and Thompson, 2004) it has the advantage of deep-going aspect-by-aspect deliberations. Much of the normative and regulative requirements of the quality assurer were treated as voice of market and thus escalated to the CUTGBS policy regime. Student Evaluation of Teaching Effectiveness (SETE) were used for Customer Satisfaction Performance evaluations, Goal Setting, and for scoping Target Value within the QFD paradigm. In essence QFD was adopted creatively and implemented on a selective incremental approach. Being a case study, the findings of this study have an indicative rather than a conclusive value. However the validation study indicated the feasibility of using QFD as a quality assurance model within the higher education system. Thesis (PhD)--University of Pretoria, 2016. Science, Mathematics and Technology Education PhD 2016-06-09T12:55:22Z 2016-06-09T12:55:22Z 2016-04-12 2016 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/2263/52949 Matorera, D 2016, The management of quality function deployment in a MEder's programme, PhD Thesis, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, viewed yymmdd <http://hdl.handle.net/2263/52949> A2016 10588885 en |