Youth Involvement in an Innovative Coconut Value Chain by Mwalimu Menza
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1. Agile Tools for Everyone: Resources
The Agile Manifesto (http://www.agilemanifesto.org/) and the Twelve Principles of Agile Software
(http://www.agilemanifesto.org/principles.html)
Mike’s Blog provides insights and practical advice to those new to Agile and Scrum.
http://www.mountaingoatsoftware.com/blog
The Scrum Alliance - http://www.scrumalliance.org/
Scrum
The Scrum Guide provides the rules and serves as the official “Scrum Body of Knowledge”
https://www.scrum.org/Scrum-Guide
Mike Cohn of Mountain Goat Software provides a library of resources about Agile including this introduction to
Scrum under a Creative Commons Attribution license. http://www.mountaingoatsoftware.com/presentations
In Agile software development, user stories are crafted with straightforward, everyday language that captures
customer expectations and requirements. User stories typically use a persona exercise as:
As a < user role >, I want < goal > so that < value >.
Examples:
As a learner, I want my eLearning courses to have open navigation so that I can freely move through the
course.
As a manager, I want my employees to be able to test out of content that they already know so that the
training is efficient and they’re back to work as soon as possible.
2. A backlog is a list of the prioritized stories.
Estimating is a challenge for software projects. Agile teams use the concept of story points to determine the
relative size of the story. Story points represent the relative size based upon effort, complexity and risk. See
http://www.agilenutshell.com/estimation_and_planning and this video
http://www.agilenutshell.com/episodes/3-estimation.
Planning Poker is an agile estimating and planning technique that is consensus based.
http://www.mountaingoatsoftware.com/agile/planning-poker
Planning Poker is also available in an online version. http://www.planningpoker.com/
Tool #1 Daily Scrum
The Daily Scrum is held on the same time and place each working day.
Each team member states
o What did you yesterday?
o What will you do today?
o What obstacles do you have?
Limited to 15 minutes
Only team members participate in the Daily Scrum
For remote teams, conduct the Daily Scrum via conference.
3. Tool #2 The Task Board with Story Points
http://www.mountaingoatsoftware.com/system/asset/file/29/MockedTaskBoard.jpg
4. Task Board Tips
Keep it simple
OK to evolve and improve your task board
Post definition of DONE
The team owns the board
Assign responsibilities to team members
Capture unplanned work on the board
Scrum is not just for software development. Scrum can also be used to organize family chores.
http://scrumforkids.com/
Schools are also using Scrum http://scrum.jeffsutherland.com/2012/04/scrum-future-for-education.html and
http://tracks.roojoom.com/u/shirly-ronen-harel,60/scrum-in-school-eduscrum-2,2022#/introduction
5. Tool #3 Burndown Charts
A burndown chart compares actual to plan. Links to two approaches in Excel
This is the simpler approach in creating the burndown: http://chandoo.org/wp/2009/07/21/burn-down-charts/
This Excel file is more complex: http://joel.inpointform.net/software-development/burn-down-charts-tutorialsimple-agile-project-tracking/
6. Tool #4 Sprint Review/Retrospective
During this Review, the Scrum team shows what they accomplished during the sprint; typically this is a demo of
the new features and is informal.
Think of the Retrospective as a lessons learned session where the team will invoke the lessons with the next sprint.
One approach is to ask what should we:
Start doing
Stop doing
Continue doing
7. Tool #5 Kanban Board
Sample:
To Do
Doing
Done
Additional columns can be added as required; ex, Approvals
Remember to move from one column must be explicit. You must define what is required to move from Doing to
Done
8. References
David J Anderson, Kanban, 2010
Jim Benson & Tonianne DeMaria Barry, Personal Kanban: Mapping Work | Navigating Life, 2011
Henrick Kniberg & Mattias Skarin, Kanban and Scrum, Making the most of both, 2010
Project Management Body of Knowledge, 5th Edition, 2013
Ken Schwaber, Agile Project Management with Scrum, 2004
Ken Schwaber & Jeff Sutherland, Scrum Guide July 2013 https://www.scrum.org/Scrum-Guide
Michele Sliger & Stacia Brokerick, The Software Project Manager’s Bridge to Agility, 2008
Sylvain Lenfle and Christoph Loch, “Lost Roots: How Project Management Came to Emphasize Control Over
Flexibility and Novelty” crg.polytechnique.fr/fichiers/crg/publications/pdf/2010-10-31-1638.pdf
Don Bolen
don@dbolen.com