Six Sigma Quality Resources for European Companies In association withValeocon Management Consulting
 Main Site > Europe Channel > Methodologies  > Total Quality Management (TQM) Search:
 
 for    
Publications
Marketplace
| iSixSigma
Stuff
| iSixSigma
Blogosphere
| Events
Calendar
| The
Dictionary
| Discussion
Forum
| Find
a Job
| Post
a Job
| Industry
News
| Newsletter
Signup
| Sigma
Calculator
| Online
Surveys
2008 Version! DMAIC Training Slides: 1,176 Slides + Instructor Notes and More for $99.95
iSixSigma Magazine Signup
 iSixSigma Live!  
  iSixSigma Live! Summit
  Agenda
  Registration Info
  Breakthrough Awards
 Free Newsletters!  
  Sign Up Now!
  Manage Subscriptions
  New To Six Sigma?
  Six Sigma Q&A
  Cert. Practice Test
  Problem Solving Wizard
  ISSSP Info
ISSSP Is The Official Six Sigma Society of iSixSigma
 Channels 
  iSixSigma Main
  Financial Services
  Healthcare
  Military
  Software / IT
 Quality Directory 
  Recent Articles
  Certifications/Awards
  Consultants
  Culture Evolution
  Methodologies
   BPR
   DMAIC
   Kaizen
   Metrics
   Six Sigma
   TQM
   Work-Out
  News & Events
  Organizations
  Product/Service Guides
  Statistics & Analysis
  Tools & Templates
  Voice of the Customer
  Free Whitepapers
 Related Topics 
  Innovation
  Outsourcing/Offshoring
  Business Process Mgt
 Quick Access 
  Help
  Search
  Advertise Here
  Article Archives
  Newsletter Archives
 User Feedback 
  Please suggest site
  improvements.
 
  [ larger form ]

Applying Total Quality Management In Academics

Bookmark This Page Bookmark This Page
Email This Page Email This Page
Format for Printing Format for Printing
Cite This Article Cite This Article
Submit an Article Submit an Article
Six Sigma Article Archive Read More Articles
By D
Download Products
heeraj Mehrotra

The concept of Total Quality Management (TQM) was developed by an American, W. Edwards Deming, after World War II for improving the production quality of goods and services. The concept was not taken seriously by Americans until the Japanese, who adopted it in 1950 to resurrect their postwar business and industry, used it to dominate world markets by 1980. By then most U.S. manufacturers had finally accepted that the nineteenth century assembly line factory model was outdated for the modern global economic markets.

The concept of TQM is applicable to academics. Many educators believe that the Deming's concept of TQM provides guiding principles for needed educational reform. In his article, "The Quality Revolution in Education," John Jay Bonstingl outlines the TQM principles he believes are most salient to education reform. He calls them the "Four Pillars of Total Quality Management."

Principle #1: Synergistic Relationships
According to this principle, an organization must focus, first and foremost, on its suppliers and customers. In a TQM organization, everyone is both a customer and supplier; this confusing concept emphasizes "the systematic nature of the work in which all are involved". In other words, teamwork and collaboration are essential. Traditionally, education has been prone to individual and departmental isolation. However, according to Bonstingl, this outdated practice no longer serves us: "When I close the classroom door, those kids are mine!" is a notion too narrow to survive in a world in which teamwork and collaboration result in high-quality benefits for the greatest number of people. The very application of the first pillar of TQM to education emphasizes the synergistic relationship between the "suppliers" and "customers". The concept of synergy suggests that performance and production is enhanced by pooling the talent and experience of individuals.

In a classroom, teacher-student teams are the equivalent of industry's front-line workers. The product of their successful work together is the development of the student's capabilities, interests, and character. In one sense, the student is the teacher's customer, as the recipient of educational services provided for the student's growth and improvement. Viewed in this way, the teacher and the school are suppliers of effective learning tools, environments, and systems to the student, who is the school's primary customer. The school is responsible for providing for the long-term educational welfare of students by teaching them how to learn and communicate in high-quality ways, how to access quality in their own work and in that of others, and how to invest in their own lifelong and life-wide learning processes by maximizing opportunities for growth in every aspect of daily life. In another sense, the student is also a worker, whose product is essentially his or her own continuous improvement and personal growth.

Principle #2: Continuous Improvement and Self Evaluation
The second pillar of TQM applied to education is the total dedication to continuous improvement, personally and collectively. Within a Total Quality school setting, administrators work collaboratively with their customers: teachers. Gone are the vestiges of "Scientific management"... whose watchwords were compliance, control and command. The foundations for this system were fear, intimidation, and an adversarial approach to problem-solving. Today it is in our best interest to encourage everyone's potential by dedicating ourselves to the continual improvement of our own abilities and those of the people with whom we work and live. Total Quality is, essentially, a win-win approach which works to everyone's ultimate advantage.

According to Deming, no human being should ever evaluate another human being. Therefore, TQM emphasizes self-evaluation as part of a continuous improvement process. In addition, this principle also laminates to the focusing on students' strengths, individual learning styles, and different types of intelligences.

Principle #3: A System of Ongoing Process
The third pillar of TQM as applied in academics is the recognition of the organization as a system and the work done within the organization must be seen as an ongoing process. The primary implication of this principle is that individual students and teachers are less to blame for failure than the system in which they work. Quality speaks to working on the system, which must be examined to identify and eliminate the flawed processes that allow its participants to fail. Since systems are made up of processes, the improvements made in the quality of those processes largely determine the quality of the resulting product. In the new paradigm of learning, continual improvement of learning processes based on learning outcomes replaces the outdated "teach and test" mode.

Principle #4: Leadership
The fourth TQM principle applied to education is that the success of TQM is the responsibility of top management. The school teachers must establish the context in which students can best achieve their potential through the continuous improvement that results from teachers and students working together. Teachers who emphasize content area literacy and principle-centered teaching provide the leadership, framework, and tools necessary for continuous improvement in the learning process.

According to the practical evidences, the TQM principles help the schools in following clauses:

(a). Redefine the role, purpose and responsibilities of schools.
(b). Improve schools as a "way of life."
(c). Plan comprehensive leadership training for educators at all levels.
(d). Create staff development that addresses the attitudes and beliefs of school staff.
(e). Use research and practice-based information to guide both policy and practice.
(f). Design comprehensive child-development initiatives that cut across a variety of agencies and institutions.

In order to achieve the above as opportunities to the academic scenario, in addition to patience, participatory management among well-trained and educated partners is crucial to the success of TQM in education; everyone involved must understand and believe in principles. Some personnel who are committed to the principles can facilitate success with TQM. Their vision and skills in leadership, management, interpersonal communication, problem solving and creative cooperation are important qualities for successful implementation of TQM.

About The Author
Dheeraj Mehrotra is a presently engaged as Quality Circle Co-ordinator, at City Montessori School, Lucknow, India. He is also engaged as a computer science lecturer, is the author 14 books on computer science, and is a freelance journalist of information technology and quality related issues in academics.

 
Rate This Article:  Current Rating: 3.77
  Poor    Excellent     
          1    2    3     4    5
Copyright © 2000-2008 iSixSigma – All Rights Reserved
Reproduction Without Permission Is Strictly Prohibited – Copyright Requests


Publish an Article: Do you have a Six Sigma tip, learning or case study?
Share it with the largest community of Six Sigma professionals, and be recognized by your peers.
It's a great way to promote your expertise and/or build your resume. Read more about submitting an article.

BEST SELLING PRODUCTS (iSixSigma Publications)
  1. Certified Lean Six Sigma Black Belt Assessment Exam
    Interested in assessing your knowledge of Lean Six Sigma? Preparing for certifications? Testing your students and traine...
  2. 30 Tips for Six Sigma Trainers Audio
    Leadership Development is like learning to ride a bicycle. If you stop peddling, you'll fall! Some technical experts...
  3. Six Sigma DMAIC Training Slides
    The complete 2008 Lean Six Sigma DMAIC course prepares participants to perform the role of a LSS Black Belt; covering wh...
  4. Certified Lean Six Sigma Green Belt Assessment Exam
    This assessment exam is useful for students interested in assessing their knowledge of Lean Six Sigma on the Green Belt ...
  5. Gage R&R Excel Template
    Gage Repeatability and Reproducibility (R&R) studies measure the amount of measurement variation that is attributabl...
  6. Process Management Training Slides
    The 2008 Process Management course is designed in two phases comprised of:352 Powerpoint slidesInstructor notesSlide exp...
  7. Certified Lean Six Sigma Black Belt E-book
    In 670 pages learn everything within the Lean Six Sigma DMAIC body of knowledge to successfully achieve Black Belt certi...
 
Six Sigma AdLinks
Minitab - The Leader In Six Sigma Statistics
ifss-institute for six sigma
Deploy Your SPC Charts Efficiently: 6 Pitfalls to Avoid
iSixSigma Live! Save up to $700
iSixSigma Job Shop: Find The Key Person


Google AdWords
 
Home | Discussion Forum | Event Calendar | Job Shop
Link To iSixSigma | Rate This Page | Report A Problem | Free Content For Your Site | Submit Article For Publishing
 Terms of Service. ©2000-2008 iSixSigma. All rights reserved. v3.0lb, 4.2-A-244
About iSixSigma · Contact Us · Privacy Policy · Site Map
nogeo