Abstract

Imparting real world experiences in a software verification and validation (SV&V) course is often a challenge due to the lack of effective active learning tools. This pedagogical requirement is important because graduates are expected to develop software that meets rigorous quality standards in functional and application domains. Realizing the necessity the authors designed and developed 42 delivery hours of active learning tools consisting of Case Studies, Class Exercises, and Case Study Videos for use in courses that impart knowledge on SV&V topics viz. requirements engineering, software reviews, configuration management, and software testing. Four key skill areas sought after by employers, namely communication skills, applied knowledge of methods, applied knowledge of tools, and research exposure are used to drive the development funded by a National Science Foundation grant and perfected through an industry-academia partnership.In this paper, we discuss in detail the four project plans the researchers and their industry counterparts followed over the past two years in the development and eventual dissemination of the active learning tools. A course enhancement plan was used to drive activities related to reviewing, enhancing, and modularizing modules, identified by a gap analysis performed by focus groups comprised of industry and academic partners. The course delivery plan was used to drive activities related to developing content delivery strategies. An evaluation and assessment plan was used to drive activities related to periodically evaluating student learning and assessing the project. And finally a course dissemination plan is being used to drive activities related to distributing course modules and assessment reports. The tools have been shared through two workshops and other means with instructors in universities and industry partners.

Highlights

  • In 2015, major software glitches affected numerous companies: Bloomberg, Royal Bank of Scotland, Nissan, Starbucks and the F 35 Joint Strike Fighter

  • The domain knowledge was packaged in active learning tools and modules that encourages significant student engagement in their learning process

  • Such active learning tools created in this work are described

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Summary

Introduction

In 2015, major software glitches affected numerous companies: Bloomberg (inoperable trading terminals), Royal Bank of Scotland (payments failure), Nissan (airbag sensory detectors malfunction), Starbucks (register malfunction) and the F 35 Joint Strike Fighter (targets detection failure). Each of these resulted in financial, brand, and more important bodily damages (Jee, 2016). With mission critical and high-risk applications that have human lives and resources dependent on software applications, it is imperative to test for, but aim for zero defects. The irony is that even after decades of development, the software industry continues to spend considerable time and resources dealing with the quality problem. In the US alone in 2007, the cost of failed software was estimated to be upwards of $75 billion in re-work costs and abandoned systems (Michaels, 2014)

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