DocumentCode :
3050212
Title :
Engineering management, engineering reasoning, and engineering education: lessons from the Space Shuttle Challenger
Author :
Lighthall, Frederick F.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Educ. & Psychol., Chicago Univ., IL, USA
fYear :
1990
fDate :
21-24 Oct 1990
Firstpage :
369
Lastpage :
377
Abstract :
The author analyzes published and archival testimony of participants in the decision to launch the Challenger, and extracts novel lessons for engineering training and engineering managers from the decision process. The professional weakness pointed to is either curricular or instructional: a gap in the education of engineers. Staff engineers and engineering managers arguing for and against the launch were unable to frame basic questions of covariation among field variables, and thus to see the relevance of field data routinely gathered. Simple analyses of field data available to both Morton-Thiokol and NASA to launch time and a year beforehand are presented to show that the arguments against launching at cold temperatures could have been quantified to the point of predicting degrees of component failure beyond those held by decision participants to be safe
Keywords :
disasters; management information systems; professional aspects; safety; space vehicles; training; Space Shuttle Challenger; archival testimony; arguments; covariation among field variables; degrees of component failure; engineering managers; engineering reasoning; engineering training; launching at cold temperatures; professional weakness; Data analysis; Data engineering; Engineering education; Engineering management; Failure analysis; Management training; NASA; Research and development management; Space shuttles; Testing;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Engineering Management Conference, 1990. Management Through the Year 2000 - Gaining the Competitive Advantage, 1990 IEEE International
Conference_Location :
Santa Clara, CA
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/IEMC.1990.201307
Filename :
201307
Link To Document :
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