Energizing software engineering education through real-world projects as experimental studies

J. Huffman Hayes

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference contributionpeer-review

37 Scopus citations

Abstract

Our experience shows that a typical industrial project can enhance software engineering research and bring theories to life. The University of Kentucky (UK) is in the initial phase of developing a software engineering curriculum. The first course, a graduate-level survey of software engineering, strongly emphasized quality engineering. assisted by the UK clinic, the students undertook a project to develop a phenylalanine milligram tracker. It helps phenylketonuria (PKU) sufferers to monitor their diet as well as assists PKU researchers to collect data. The project was also used as an informal experimental study. The applied project approach to teaching software engineering appears to be successful thus far. The approach taught many important software and quality engineering principles to inexperienced graduate students in an accurately simulated industrial development environment. It resulted in the development of a framework for describing and evaluating such a real-world project, including evaluation of the notion of a user advocate. It also resulted in interesting experimental trends, though based on a very small sample. Specifically, estimation skills seem to improve over time and function point estimation may be more accurate than LOC estimation.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationProceedings - 15th Conference on Software Engineering Education and Training, CSEE and T 2002
Pages192-206
Number of pages15
ISBN (Electronic)0769515150
DOIs
StatePublished - 2002
Event15th Conference on Software Engineering Education and Training, CSEE and T 2002 - Covington, United States
Duration: Feb 25 2002Feb 27 2002

Publication series

NameSoftware Engineering Education Conference, Proceedings
Volume2002-January
ISSN (Print)1093-0175

Conference

Conference15th Conference on Software Engineering Education and Training, CSEE and T 2002
Country/TerritoryUnited States
CityCovington
Period2/25/022/27/02

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2002 IEEE.

Keywords

  • Amino acids
  • Application software
  • Biomedical monitoring
  • Computer industry
  • Computer science education
  • Performance evaluation
  • Personal digital assistants
  • Reliability engineering
  • Software engineering
  • Software quality

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Software
  • Education

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