e-academy – IT training excellence in Cardiff, Newport, Bristol and South Wales

Course details
Fee £1195
Days 3
Code ISEBRE
Course dates
May 
Jun25
Jul 
Aug 
Sep17
Oct 

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ISEB Requirements Engineering

The ISEB Requirements Engineering training course is available at our Cardiff training centre in Wales, which is also within easy reach of Newport, Bristol and South Wales

Overview

 

Requirements Engineering has been developed from Assist KD's twenty years of experience of consultancy, training and software development.  It presents a range of key techniques for discovering, analysing and documenting business and system requirements and places these within the context of our own ADAPT© framework for requirements engineering.  The emphasis of the course is very much on providing participants with 'hands on' experience of actually using the techniques as they work through a realistic case study scenario.  A comprehensive course manual supports the course and also provides a valuable 'how to' reference guide for participants to use in their day-to-day work.

 

Examination Information - ISEB Certificate

 

The course prepares participants to sit the one-hour, open book, examination leading to the certificate in Requirements Engineering offered by the Information Systems Examinations Board (ISEB).  This certificate is also a core module for the ISEB Business Analysis Diploma.

 

The exams is taken on the last day of the course.

 

Alignment to the IIBA Business Analysis Body of Knowledge

 

Assist Knowledge Development is an IIBA (International Institute of Business Analysis) Endorsed Education Provider, which means that this course is approved as being consistent with the IIBA Business Analysis Body of Knowledge (IIBA BABoK) V1.6.

 

Course Outline

 

 Rationale for requirements engineering
• Problems in developing IT systems
• The costs of errors
• Knowledge types - explicit and tacit
• Definition of a 'requirement'
• Hierarchy of requirements
• Characteristics of requirements engineering
• A framework for requirements engineering

 

The role of the analyst
• Stakeholders in requirements engineering
• Roles and responsibilities
• User analysis

 

Requirements planning and management
• The importance of planning in requirements engineering
• Project initiation and the project initiation document
• Features of requirements management

 

Requirements elicitation 1 - interviewing
• Introduction to elicitation techniques
• Interview preparation
• Structure of an interview
• Documenting the interview

 

Requirements elicitation 2 - workshops
• What is a workshop?
• The benefits - and limitations - of a workshop
• Workshop roles and responsibilities
• Preparing for the workshop
• Techniques to elicit information
• Techniques for documenting workshop results

 

Requirements elicitation 3 - supplementary techniques
• Observation, ethnographic studies and STROBE
• Quantitative techniques - activity sampling
• Document analysis
• Record searching
• Questionnaires
• Special purpose records

 

Documenting requirements
• What should be documented?
• Contents of the requirements document
• The requirements catalogue

 

Requirements analysis 1 - modelling the processes
• What are we analysing and why?
• Characteristics of good requirements
• Framework for requirements analysis
• Use case diagrams
• Scope definition/re-definition
• Checking use cases against requirements
• The use of a context diagram

 

Requirements analysis 2 - modelling the data
• Objects and classes - concepts
• Classes and attributes
• Associations and multiplicity
• Building a class diagram
• Using class diagrams to confirm business rules and data requirements
• Checking models for consistency and completeness - the CRUD matrix

 

Requirements analysis 3 - categorisation and organisation
• Organising requirements into a hierarchy
• Categorising requirements - functional, non-functional, technical and general
• Structuring the requirements catalogue

 

Requirements analysis 4 - necessity and feasibility checking
• Checking the relevance of requirements to business goals
• Assessing the feasibility (business, technical, financial) of requirements

 

Requirements analysis 5 - quality control
• Checking requirements against quality criteria
• Identifying conflicting requirements
• Resolving requirements conflicts - negotiating skills

 

Requirements analysis 6 - testability of requirements
• Identifying acceptance criteria
• The concept of business tolerances

 

Scenarios and prototyping
• Purpose and use - for elicitation, clarification and validation
• Developing scenarios
• Diagrammatic approaches to scenario modelling
• Use case descriptions to document scenarios
• Rationale for prototyping
• Throwaway versus evolutionary prototyping
• The prototyping process
• Scope and fidelity of prototypes
• Dangers of prototyping

 

Requirements management - recap
• Recap on features of requirements management
• Requirements traceability - importance and processes
• Baselining and version control
• The change control process
• Requirements re-use
• Support tools (Computer Aided Software Engineering)
• Requirements patterns

 

Validating requirements
• The place of validation in the requirements engineering process
• Validation versus verification
• Issues that can arise at validation
• Requirements validation process and the review meeting
• Attributes to be checked by reviewers
• Use of prototyping to validate requirements
• The importance of sign-off

 

Delivering the requirements
• The business case and the project lifecycle
• Approaches to solution delivery - build versus buy
• Development lifecycles
• From analysis to design
• Post-implementation review and benefits confirmation
• Use of requirements in system maintenance

 

Recap and review
• Recap on course contents
• The competencies required to deliver good requirements

 

Presented in association with AssistKD, one of the UK's leading specialists in business analysis consultancy and training.