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The Benefits Of Transparency In Managing Software Capstone Projects
Author(s) -
Kevin Gary,
Harry Koehnemann
Publication year - 2020
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.18260/1-2--16985
Subject(s) - capstone , agile software development , engineering management , scrum , documentation , software project management , project management , software engineering , class (philosophy) , team software process , computer science , project manager , process (computing) , engineering , process management , software development process , knowledge management , software , software development , systems engineering , software construction , computer security , artificial intelligence , programming language , operating system
This paper describes the impact of an agile process support environment in helping faculty manage software engineering capstone projects and the learning outcomes associated with the capstone experience. Software engineering capstone projects are notoriously time-consuming to manage for faculty mentors. Team projects often fall behind due to the inexperience of the students and the external pressures they face. They may be accustomed to performing heroic acts on prior individual class projects, and think they can be successful this way again. But in a significantly sized real-world team project, they find out too late that this approach will not work. Students remain successful often by significant effort on the part of a faculty mentor. The mentor may setup a process infrastructure to enables project monitoring. Mentors may find themselves asking for frequent in-class project reviews, out-of-class appointments, and significant documentation. Mentoring a capstone project, while a potentially rewarding experience, can become a significant time sink and lead to faculty burnout. We are utilizing the IBM Jazz environment including the Rational Team Concert (RTC) integrated development environment (IDE) to address project management for capstone projects using the Agile/Scrum methodology. Jazz/RTC allows all stakeholders (students, sponsors, and faculty) to transparently review a process to assess project health at any point in time. Further, transparent continuous project monitoring gives mentors the ability to provide just-in-time-but-not-too-late formative feedback, as well as allow continuous assessment of learning outcomes. The ability to “see where you are” in the process, and understand how the process’ practices drive progress and completion, is an invaluable learning aid for students struggling to grasp the benefits of these methods.

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