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Learner Reviews & Feedback for Six Sigma Tools for Analyze by Kennesaw State University

4.7
stars
1,842 ratings

About the Course

This course will cover the Measure phase and portions of the Analyze phase of the Six Sigma DMAIC (Define, Measure, Analyze, Improve, and
Control) process. You will learn about lean tools for process analysis, failure mode and effects analysis (FMEA), measurement system analysis
(MSA) and gauge repeatability and reproducibility (GR&R), and you will be introduced to basic statistics. This course will outline useful measure
and analysis phase tools and will give you an overview of statistics as they are related to the Six Sigma process. The statistics module will
provide you with an overview of the concepts and you will be given multiple example problems to see how to apply these con...
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Top reviews

KM

Nov 29, 2020

Great course to learn about the in-depth idea of Six Sigma with applications. I highly recommend this course. Thank you all for the immense support throughout the course.

ET

Oct 15, 2018

I enjoy the clear presentations of the lecturers. The lecture slides are extremely helpful. The lectures compliment very well the ideas mentioned in the textbook.

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251 - 255 of 255 Reviews for Six Sigma Tools for Analyze

By Mina N

•

Jun 23, 2020

good

By Moataz A

•

Jun 13, 2021

The course relies too much on reading the book. Which is not why we took the course. If we wanted to read the book we could've.

The instructors' presentations are very vague and all they do is just read what's written there... There is no practical assignments or hands-on training.

Overall, the course and the specialization is very weak.

By Jiapei Z

•

Nov 1, 2023

"P(x)=n!/x!(n-x)!p↑x(1-p)↑(n-x)"??? Which school in this galaxy taught you to write equations like this??

By Eric H

•

Aug 4, 2024

I wish the last part of this section of the course, mainly module 4, focused on more practical examples of how this information would be useful to me. The examples used, especially in the quizzes, felt arbitrary. Why do I need to know what % chance of pulling a defective sample from a large group of products? In the modern world of QC / QA / Food Safety - we all know you cannot test / sample your way to high quality. It felt like a worthless exercise. Same thing with the questions of heights and the like.

By Deleted A

•

Aug 11, 2022

For manufacturing folks.