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LogisticsM.S.
Non-Thesis
K. Jamie Rogers420 Woolf Hall, 817.272.3092
The Graduate Faculty of the colleges of Business Administration and Engineering
The Logistics Program is designed to meet an increasing state, national, and international demand for professionals with technical or business education and experience in the area of logistics and supply chain. Such professionals will need a unique combination of technical and business knowledge and skills and will have technical experience and degrees in engineering, mathematics or business.
Logistics is an interdisciplinary field of study which comprises the entire set of functions associated with the flow of goods, information, and payments among suppliers and consumers from organization of raw material to final recycling or disposal of finished goods. The integration of engineering and business content is done in a fashion that prepares an experienced professional engineer or manager for a leadership role in planning, developing, implementing and managing the firm's logistics and supply chain capabilities in the global marketplace. The overall purpose of the Logistics Program at U.T. Arlington is to provide graduates with the understanding needed to manage the firm's logistics and supply chain systems and infrastructure and to accomplish the organization's operational, strategic and competitive objectives.
Applicants must hold a baccalaureate degree in science, mathematics, engineering or other appropriate field.
Unconditional admission into the M.S. Logistics program is granted if all of the following conditions are met.
Prospective students not meeting the conditions for unconditional admission may be granted probationary admission if their GPA is 2.6 or greater. Students granted probationary admission must maintain a GPA of at least 3.0 for the first 9 hours completed at UTA. Other conditions, such as deficiency courses, may be specified by the Graduate Advisor.
The admission decision is deferred if insufficient information is available.
Prospective students with a GPA below 2.6 may be denied admission at the discretion of the Graduate Advisor. The Graduate Advisor may grant probationary admission if other factors suggest a potential for success in the graduate program.
The M.S. degree in Logistics requires 36 hours of coursework. The coursework is divided between the Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Systems Engineering and the Department of Information Systems and Operations Management. The program includes such courses as:
Probability and Statistics Operations Research Production and Inventory Control Production Systems Design Enterprise Modeling Logistics Information Systems Logistics Transportation Systems Design Logistics Distribution Systems Design Business Logistics Purchasing and Materials Management Supply Chain Management Approved Electives
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