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Materials Processing & Manufacturing InstituteThe Materials Processing & Manufacturing Institute (MPMI) at MIT is an innovative partnership between academia and industry designed to address common needs in engineering education and research. The practice-oriented graduate degree program offered through the MPMI has a twofold purpose: it educates engineers to work in today's complex processing and manufacturing environments, and it contributes to the development of new and improved manufacturing processes directly related to industrial needs. A key feature of the MPMI is university-industry collaboration, with respect to both the educational and the research components of the program.The educational program of the MPMI is designed to provide students from MIT's School of Engineering with practical industrial experience along with the traditional graduate engineering education for which MIT has become so well known. The 15-month master's degree program combines on-campus coursework with on-site industrial research, including a thesis to be written either at the sponsor company or at MIT. Students and faculty benefit from direct exposure to industrial technologies, modern commercial methods of materials processing and manufacturing, and complex organizational issues of manufacturing firms. The program for the development of new, improved manufacturing processes will combine MIT's historic strengths in the conception and design of novel technologies with those of industry in delineating needs and in scaling to practice. Novel processes and products developed at MIT are more rapidly and more effectively introduced into industrial operations when MIT students work in conjunction with industry in scaling the new technology to the factory floor. Some goals of the MPMI include
Some benefits to industrial participants in the MPMI include
The Materials Processing and Manufacturing Institute is a joint venture of the Materials Processing Center and the Department of Materials Science and Engineering. An Advisory Board including representatives of participating companies exists to review and recommend curricula and to provide advice concerning overall program direction. Thesis supervision is the responsibility of the MIT-industry thesis supervisors. Overall academic responsibility (subjects, degree requirements, etc.) rests with the Departmental Graduate Committee. For more information about the MPMI, please contact:Mark Beals Associate Director 617-253-2129 617-258-6900 fax mbeals@mit.edu Mailing AddressMaterials Processing & Manufacturing Institute77 Massachusetts Ave. MIT Room 12-007 Cambridge, Ma 02139 |