This workshop describes different life-cycle models, when they should be used, and how they should be used. Included are models for large and small system develoopment, for known and unknown requirements, for stable and for risky systems. Participants will learn how to choose models and how to tailor them to fit their projects, and how following the right model can lead to increased productivity and better products. Participants will also see how choosing the wrong model can be the main reason for project failure, either because of incorrect development or because of cost/schedule overruns. Guidance will be given for setting baselines, reviews, and document delivery schedules for each of the models. Specific suggestions for quality assurance, configuration control, testing, and user/developer interactions will also be given. At the conclusion of this workshop, partipants will be able to analyze their projects and choose the proper life-cycle to develop them.
This workshop is intended for project managers, systems engineers, software engineers, programmers, analysts, and staff members involved in project development or substantial system maintenance activities.
Classical and Object-Oriented Software Engineering, by Stephen Schach, McGraw-Hill (1998).
$250 per participant (based on 20 participants)
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Howard J. Bender, Ph.D.
President
The Education Process Improvement Center, Inc.
P.O. Box 186
Riverdale, Maryland 20738
hjbender@epicent.com