U-M’s Ross School of Business offers new master’s degree in supply chain management
ANN ARBOR—A new Master of Supply Chain Management (MSCM) program will be offered by the Stephen M. Ross School of Business at the University of Michigan beginning January 2008. The admission deadline for the inaugural class is Aug. 1, 2007.
The one-year program is designed to add breadth and depth of knowledge in business and supply chain management. In line with the Ross School’s distinctive action-based learning approach to business education, the MSCM program integrates a team-based summer project experience into the curriculum. Students will work on real-world assignments sponsored by companies with guidance from faculty in the school’s Operations and Management Sciences department.
“No other top-ranked business school currently offers a supply chain concentration, let alone a comprehensive one-year MSCM degree,” said program director Ravi Anupindi, associate professor of operations management at the Ross School. “The program is highly selective and designed to prepare students to assume a leadership role in the rapidly changing field of supply chain management.
“The supply chain touches almost every function of global commerce. Business leaders view supply chain management as the central nervous system of the global economy. That’s why companies are increasingly looking for innovative leaders with the vision and skill to manage their supply chains.”
The 30-credit-hour MSCM program will grant admission for a winter-term start only. Courses include manufacturing and supply operations, supply chain management, supply chain analytics, logistics, strategic sourcing, project management, IT for logistics and supply chain management, and several electives and projects courses in operations management and across all other business disciplines.
Admission to the program is open to graduates of accredited colleges and universities in virtually all areas of study, including science, economics, engineering, business and other areas. Previous courses in engineering, science and mathematics are important, but not essential.
Before enrolling, students must have completed the equivalent of a four-year U.S. bachelor’s degree and have taken the Graduate Management Admission Test.