INCOSE Los Angeles Chapter: Tutorial - Patterns in System Architecture Development
In-Person at Dassault Systemes Long Beach, Online via Zoom
INCOSE Los Angeles Chapter: Tutorial: Patterns in System Architecture Development
Date: Saturday, May 17th 2025
Time: 9:00 AM
Location: In-Person at Dassault Systemes Long Beach, Online via Zoom
Cost: $50-$100
Register Here!
The increasing use of architectural models across diverse teams and organizations present challenges to model integration, scalability, and reuse. Architectural patterns in modeling presents an approach to address these challenges. Architectural patterns are reusable solutions to common software and system architecture development problems. Patterns leverage best practices to develop structured, scalable, and manageable architectural solutions. In this tutorial, we will apply architectural patterns to build architectural models using the Systems Modeling Language. As a result, it is expected that the attendees will gain a better understanding of what architectural patterns are and their application to system engineering modeling. This tutorial will introduce several common architectural patterns to enable the composition of models across teams using SysML V2. Prerequisites: · Familiarity with the Systems Modeling Language (SysML) · A software application capable of using SysML · Enthusiasm for learning new modeling techniques!
Presenter: Dr. Mark L. McKelvin Jr. Lecturer, University of Southern California Principal Engineer, The Aerospace Corporation Dr. Mark McKelvin is a Principal Engineer at The Aerospace Corporation and a Lecturer in the System Architecting and Engineering graduate program at the University of Southern California, Viterbi School of Engineering. At The Aerospace Corporation, he serves as the technical authority in digital engineering, including an emphasis in software and systems engineering, where he leads teams towards the digital transformation and implementation of national space systems. He holds a Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering from Clark Atlanta University and a Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences from the University of California, Berkeley.