Back to MBSE: Model-Based Systems Engineering
University at Buffalo

MBSE: Model-Based Systems Engineering

This Model-Based Systems Engineering (MBSE) course and the Digital Thread courses featured earlier in this specialization bring together the concepts from across digital manufacturing and design, forming a vision in which the geometry of a product is just one way of describing it. MBSE is where the model resulting from the evolution of system requirements, design, analysis, verification and validation activities is the focus of design and manufacturing. Students will gain an understanding of systems engineering, the model-based approach to design and manufacturing, the Digital Twin, and a roadmap toward a model-based enterprise. Students will be able to explain the value and expectations of systems engineering and model-based systems engineering, and the underlying motivations and opportunities represented by a model-based enterprise. They will develop the knowledge necessary to perform a baseline assessment of an organization’s potential to leverage MBSE. Main concepts of this course will be delivered through lectures, readings, discussions and various videos. This is the eighth course in the Digital Manufacturing & Design Technology specialization that explores the many facets of manufacturing’s “Fourth Revolution,” aka Industry 4.0, and features a culminating project involving creation of a roadmap to achieve a self-established DMD-related professional goal. To learn more about the Digital Manufacturing and Design Technology specialization, please watch the overview video by copying and pasting the following link into your web browser: https://youtu.be/wETK1O9c-CA

Status: Verification And Validation
Status: Manufacturing Processes
BeginnerCourse21 hours

Featured reviews

KM

5.0Reviewed Sep 20, 2019

Excellent course and very informative! The resources shared throughout the course is outstanding and really helped me understand the entire process.

SD

5.0Reviewed Feb 3, 2020

Very exhaustive and informative..would greatly benefit my academics and my profession.. recommend this to others engaged in Digital Manufacturing / IOT / System Engineering domain

LP

5.0Reviewed Oct 23, 2022

e​asy to understand. great examples. nice to have the text as well.i​ disagreed with a few of the quiz answers, and sent comments as i went through the course. i have screenshots if needed.

GT

4.0Reviewed May 29, 2020

Overall, the course was a very good introduction to MBSE. There were some broken links in the reference materials, but these did not detract from the rest of the course.

AC

4.0Reviewed May 18, 2022

short and to th epoint , covered various concepts in a short period of time. with work experience this course is more effective to understand the things that often happens behind the curtain

KP

4.0Reviewed Jul 4, 2020

Good course, even without the specialization's previous courses it is easy to understand. I would recommend to do a course on system engineering first.

JS

5.0Reviewed Jun 3, 2020

very useful course in my professional definite i learn new ideas got the business and how to development in small scale industry , i learn about all thinks

JA

5.0Reviewed Oct 14, 2020

I've worked for many years in an MBSE environment as a design engineer. This course gave me a clear view on how the system operate, from design/manufacturing, to procurement/shipping

KC

5.0Reviewed Jun 26, 2020

Without coursera very difficult to learn various university courses in globally. For me it is very good platform to learn various areas of subject with renowned professors. Thank to Coursera.

JC

5.0Reviewed Dec 22, 2022

Very well done. Provides a foundational overview of what MBSE is and how to assess an organizations current state and how to approach reaching a desired state.

RS

4.0Reviewed Nov 10, 2019

Overall good course. Lots of useful information! Could have used a few more detailed examples of how MBSE is actually implemented in real life, but definitely learned a lot about what

DP

4.0Reviewed Dec 26, 2020

Good intro course; however, many of the reference URL were broken. Also, the GitHub site for the NIST self-assessment tool had a corrupt file.

All reviews

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