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Exhibit 5. Examples of applied engineering management manuscripts
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Examples
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Description
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Experience
Overviews
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Articles
which provide a reflection of one or more organizations' experience in dealing
with an engineering management related issue. Typical articles
provide a:
- Summary of the generalized challenges facing the
technical organization or engineering manager that the article deals
with
- Definition of the engineering management question
addressed by the paper
- Description of the relevant background literature
- Description of the case organization(s)
- Organizational description
- Pre-intervention performance
- The intervention(s)
- The post-intervention performance data
- Identification of the challenges faced by the
organization while confronting the experience.
- Discussion of the lessons learned.
- Discussion of the implications for the
engineering manager.
These
investigations provide moderate sample size or moderate level of validity
and reliability.
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Management
Tool or Process Application by an Organization
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Articles
which provide a reflection of one or more organizations' experience in applying
a specific engineering management practice. Typical articles provide
a:
- Summary of the generalized challenges facing the
technical organization or engineering manager that the article deals
with
- Definition of the engineering management question
addressed by the paper
- Description of the relevant background literature
- Overview of the process or tool
- Description of the case organization(s)
- Organizational description
- Pre-intervention performance
- Application of the process or tool to the
organization
- The post-intervention performance data
- Identification of the challenges faced by the
organization
- Discussion of the lessons learned.
- Discussion of the implications for the
engineering manager.
These
investigations provide moderate sample size or moderate level of validity
and reliability.
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Management
Tool Tutorial
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Articles
which provide tutorials, critiques, or opinions of concepts important to
engineering management. Typical articles provide a description of the:
- Summary of the generalized challenges facing the
technical organization or engineering manager that the article deals
with
- Definition of the engineering management question
addressed by the paper
- Overview of the process or tool
- Demonstration/application of the process/tool to
a specific problem
- Identification of the challenges in using the
process/tool
- Discussion of the lessons learned.
- Discussion of the implications for the
engineering manager.
These
investigations provide moderate sample size or moderate level of validity
and reliability.
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Who
do I submit the paper to?
To submit a paper to EMJ the author must complete the following steps:
1.
Prepare the
manuscript using the EMJ format requirements defined below
2.
Go to Engineering Management Journal Editorial Manager website at http://www.editorialmanager.com/emj/.
3.
If the author has not previously submitted a paper using EMJ's Editorial Manager, select "Register Now" and follow the instruction to register as an author.
4.
If the author has already created an account in the system, select the "Author Login" button and login.
5.
Enter author information and follow the step-by-step instructions to submit the manuscript.
What
are the formatting requirements?
Papers must be submitted in English. No maximum length exists, but authors
should write concisely. A significant review element will be the paper's
length relative to its content.
The
manuscript should use 10-pt Times New Roman (or if unavailable,
another 10-pt serif typeface), single spaced, with 1" margins. Tables and
figures are called exhibits, numbered consecutively, and placed on separate
pages, with a text indication of their placement. The Arial (Helvetica,
Megaron, or similar sans serif) typeface should be used for exhibit and
line art callouts and exhibit titles.
The manuscript must include an abstract and all exhibits. Do not include author information in the manuscript.
Abstract. Each submission
must include a 100-word nonmathematical abstract suitable for retrieval
purposes. The abstract should summarize the purpose, scope, and principal
results and conclusions. It should not contain literature citations.
Footnotes. Footnotes are
strongly discouraged. If unavoidable, they are preferred to endnotes.
References. References should
be complete, clear, styled as shown below, and listed alphabetically by
author. For all authors, full names are required. For periodicals,
include volume #, issue #, month/quarter, year, and page numbers. For book
chapters, include editor's full name(s), publisher, and page numbers. Cite
each reference in the text by author and year. Only cited references and
publications that are readily available should be included. Examples:
Amos,
John M., and Bernard R. Sarchet, Management for Engineers, Prentice
Hall (1980).
Peterson, Jacob L., and Dennis C. Emmett, "Setting Expectations: A
Critical Pre-Project Activity," Engineering Management Journal,
10:2 (June 1998), pp. 11-15.
Koen, Peter A., and Pankaj Kohli, "Idea Generation: Who Comes Up with
the Most Profitable Ideas," Proceedings of the 19th Annual
Conference, American Society for Engineering Management (October 1998),
pp. 230-237.
Exhibits. For all exhibits,
use Arial, 10-pt maximum. Exhibits prepared for live presentation (usually
14 pt or larger) MUST be modified before submission. Use portrait layout
where possible. Do not box exhibits. If paper is accepted, exhibits must be
submitted in an acceptable electronic format.
Style.
Write
clearly, simply, and directly. Use "I" or "we," not
"the author(s)." Data should be rounded to 3 or fewer significant
digits.
Review
Process.
The process ensures the anonymity of the reviewers, and attempts to do the
same for the authors. Feel free to quote your previous work without
attribution.
Publication
of Accepted Papers. After the review process is complete, authors must
complete and return a signed copyright form (supplied by EMJ). Accepted manuscripts are subject to changes made by the editor. The author is solely responsible for all statements made in his or her work, including changes made by the editor. A 75-word biography for each author must also be submitted prior to publication of any manuscript.
Reprints. Authors will receive a final pdf file of their article.
Miscellaneous
- Be sure to include "P.E," "P.Eng.," or the equivalent for author(s), as appropriate, in the affiliation line.
- Run a final spell-check and grammar check before submitting your manuscript.
- Follow all formatting requirements to avoid delays in processing.
EMJ EDITOR:
Toni Doolen
Oregon State Univ.
204 Rogers Hall
Corvallis, OR 97331-6001
Work Phone:
Work Fax:
Doolen@engr.orst.edu
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