Project Management (PM) CPSO

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Course numbers with the # symbol included (e.g. #400) have not been taught in the last 3 years.

PM 800 - Introduction to Project Management

Credits: 3

This is a survey course introducing project management as a profession and an academic field of study. It provides the foundation for more advanced project management courses. It is a prerequisite to other courses in the degree program unless permission is granted. The student is introduced to the Project Management Body of Knowledge, (PMBOK Guide), as well as other international standards. Students will examine key tools and methodologies in use to manage large, complex projects and explore how these tools and techniques can be used to assess the project's overall status, its variance from the project plan and evaluate alternative recovery scenarios. Students will be introduced to the roles of project and program managers in today's enterprise and the tradeoffs they make among triple constraints of scope, time and cost.

Equivalent(s): PM 800G

Grade Mode: Letter Grading

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  1. Analyze the role of the ethical project manager in today's business environment;
  2. Differentiate between three predominant sets of project management standards, understanding their backgrounds and how to select from amongst them, given the opportunity;
  3. Adhere to appropriate project management standards when performing project management activities;
  4. Explain the project management life cycle model, using the language of contemporary project management, and how the model relates to individual project and product life cycles at both a macro- and micro-level;
  5. Demonstrate a high-level awareness of project portfolio management and the impact project status reports have on it.

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PM 811 - Project Chartering and Planning

Credits: 3

Studies have shown that nearly 75% of commercial projects are deemed to have not met the expectations of their funding sponsors. As professionals committed to effective project management, how do we change this paradigm? In this course, students start by learning how a project charter refines a project idea in a more concrete project narrative. Students develop a project's work breakdown structure and establish a realistic project schedule and budget. Students conduct project risk identification and assessment sessions to evaluate the overall risk posture of the project. Students will define the communications and change control plans.

Prerequisite(s): PM 800 with a minimum grade of B- or PM 800G with a minimum grade of B-.

Equivalent(s): PM 811G

Grade Mode: Letter Grading

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  1. Articulate the key purpose and components of a project charter;
  2. Decompose a scope statement into a Work Breakdown Structure (WBS) in support of development of a resource-loaded project schedule and budget;
  3. Develop project estimates and forecast and update budgets, accounting for the factors which influence project cost and cause cost variances;
  4. Explain the relationship between project schedule duration and the influence of the time value of money;
  5. Analyze the dependencies available to influence a project's critical path and modify one or more dependencies to optimize a project schedule;
  6. Assess the impacts associated with project risks and determine which of four risk responses is appropriate in particular circumstances or sample cases.

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PM 813 - Delivering Business Value

Credits: 3

This course provides students insight into the techniques and tools that can be applied to evaluate a project and the project's true status. Students will apply the earned value methodology to determine a project's true status for both schedule and cost in terms of the dollar value of work performed. Students will explore risk management and other techniques used to ensure project success. Within this course, students will have the opportunity to apply the various methods and tools used in a successful project to classroom assignments, in preparation for doing the same within their capstone projects. Students consider how projects can be accomplished within an agile or adaptive project management methodology.

Prerequisite(s): PM 811 with a minimum grade of B- or PM 811G with a minimum grade of B-.

Equivalent(s): PM 813G

Grade Mode: Letter Grading

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  1. Develop project estimates, forecasts and updated budgets, monitor overall project status, and relay appropriate project status information to project sponsor and other stakeholders.
  2. Analyze and apply the factors which influence project cost and cost variances, including the relationship of project cost to other project elements: project scope, schedule, quality and risk.
  3. Calculate the various performance indices embodied with Earned Value management, their application, and their use in today's enterprise.
  4. Associate the impact of those accounting practices used to categorize costs and write-down assets to practices associated with project financial decision-making and performance.
  5. Evaluate and initiate action on change requests in accordance with the processes documented in the Change Management Plan.
  6. Apply current risk management methodologies in risk assessment sessions with the project team and adjust contingency reserves as needed to be responsive to a risk.

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PM 815 - Negotiation, Contracting, and Procurement

Credits: 3

Outsourcing is becoming more and more critical in todays economic environment making it essential that a project manager in the multi-national marketplace have a firm understanding of the negotiating, contracting and procurement environment and potential pitfalls. This course will address the interdependence of the make-or-buy decision-making process and the success of many projects in terms of risk management as well as achieving acceptable financial goals. Students will explore contracting pitfalls by addressing and proving an understanding of the key factors, regulations, and vocabulary which are critical for the project manager to be able to employ in their business dealings with contracting and legal departments.

Prerequisite(s): (PM 800 with a minimum grade of B- or PM 800G with a minimum grade of B-) and (PM 811 with a minimum grade of B- or PM 811G with a minimum grade of B-) and (PM 813 with a minimum grade of B- or PM 813G with a minimum grade of B-).

Equivalent(s): PM 815G

Grade Mode: Letter Grading

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  1. Recognize individual contract elements, in addition to basic contracting terms and their use in the negotiating process.
  2. Discuss ethical and legal considerations of procurements.
  3. Select the appropriate contract type for a project.
  4. Prepare a project procurement management plan.
  5. Conduct contract negotiation and oversight appropriate to contract type.

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PM 817 - Managing Project Portfolios

Credits: 3

This course addresses the processes and techniques used in the strategic management of project portfolios. Students examine the decision-making tools, techniques, and rationale used to reach consensus for funding specific programs and projects and to bring them into the tactical layer for execution. Students will study various objective methodologies, benefit measurement techniques as well as market analytics, competitive analysis, and market driven approaches. Strategic planning and management, and its link to Project Portfolio Management, will also be discussed during this course. Students identify their capstone project and create the associated Proposal/Business Case and Project Charter.

Prerequisite(s): PM 813 with a minimum grade of B- or PM 813G with a minimum grade of B-.

Equivalent(s): PM 817G

Grade Mode: Letter Grading

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  1. Develop a project manager's level of knowledge and understanding of the need for project portfolio management (PPM).
  2. Describe the PPM Reconciliation process and need to translate and track customer and market requirements through to project feature verification and delivery.
  3. Integrate a working knowledge of strategic planning and management with project portfolio management.
  4. Select and prioritize projects to be included in the project portfolio with a focus on meeting organizational long-term strategic goals.

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PM 819 - Total Quality Management

Credits: 3

A sound quality management strategy and plan are critical in today's complex business organizations and projects. Students in this course will review the history of quality efforts from Deming, Juran and Crosby in the setting of the original quality efforts, international competition, and the concept of Six-Sigma as initiated by the Motorola Corporation in response to that competition. The use of the Baldrige Excellence Framework for designing, implementing, and improving project and organizational practices that influence quality will be explored. Students will examine multiple specific process improvement approaches they could apply within their organizational / project quality plans, approaches such as preventions over Inspection and continuous Improvement of processes.

Equivalent(s): PM 819G

Grade Mode: Letter Grading

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  1. Identify the impacts strategic and operations planning, consumer requirements, workforce practices, measurement, and analysis have on a project's or organization's quality management strategy.
  2. Examine the Baldrige Excellence Framework and ISO-9000 series of quality standards, developing an understanding of their impacts on organizational and project quality management plans.
  3. Analyze the differences between and importance of quality planning, quality control, quality assurance, and quality improvements in developing an organization's or team's quality culture and processes.
  4. Develop examples of the use of data to improve performance and explain how that use of data provides a competitive advantage within the context of a specific industry.

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PM 820 - Introduction to Lean Management

Credits: 1

A knowledge of lean management and how it enhances business operations is required for today's project managers and operational managers. In this introductory course, students will explore the concepts and principles associated with lean management approaches. Through the study of actual lean implementations, students will develop an understanding of the relationship between lean management and agile management.

Equivalent(s): PM 820G

Grade Mode: Letter Grading

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  1. Demonstrate the ability to discern when and which lean management approach might be viable in a particular given scenario.
  2. Explain how lean principles support agile project management practices.
  3. Demonstrate the use of specific strategies to anticipate and address the change resistance that often accompanies lean implementations.

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PM 821 - Introduction to Theory of Constraints

Credits: 2

In this 2-credit introductory course, students will develop an understanding of the concepts and principles associated with the Theory of Constraints and Critical Chain thinking. We will explore the proposition that project managers should focus on those activities that are resource-constrained as opposed to the project's critical path when monitoring project progress. We will analyze case studies that test and extend these ideas in real-world scenarios. Through the review of these case studies, students will develop an understanding of the principles associated with the theory of constraints, critical chain approaches, and how they might be used within project management.

Equivalent(s): PM 821G

Grade Mode: Letter Grading

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  1. Articulate criteria for determining when Critical Chain Project Management might be applicable.
  2. Explain how the principles associated with the Theory of Constraints are applicable to project management.
  3. Demonstrate the application of the Theory of Constraints within a schedule developed using the Critical Chain approach.
  4. Analyze the use of the Critical Chain approach within the context of specific case studies in the field.

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PM 850 - Project Management Integrative Capstone

Credits: 3

This integrative capstone is the final course in the Master of Science in Project Management program. All other required coursework must have been completed prior to receiving approval to register for this course. Students in this course will have the opportunity to apply the principles learned in the entire program of study and will demonstrate competence by integrating and applying those skills to a real-world scenario. Students will apply knowledge in a group case study setting while documenting the decision-making process, and will analyze methodologies and rationale for selecting those methodologies in a project log including templates designed and used, case study analytical results, and decision outcome analysis/results.

Equivalent(s): PM 850G

Grade Mode: Letter Grading

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  1. Document experiences in a formal portfolio of exhibits including a discussion/defense of: a. Requirements gathering methodology and results. b. Review of analysis techniques and rationale for tools chosen. c. Document confidence level in analytical results including the definition and defense of the process steps required to do so. d. Analyze methodologies applied and assess process strengths and weaknesses.

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