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2003 International Symposium on Empirical Software Engineering (ISESE'03)
Observational Studies to Accelerate Process Experience in Classroom Studies: An Evaluation
Roman Castles (Rome), Italy
September 30-October 01
ISBN: 0-7695-2002-2
Jeff Carver, University of Maryland
Forrest Shull, Software Engineering, Maryland
Victor Basili, University of Maryland; Software Engineering, Maryland
Software Engineering studies run in classroom environments can and have made important contributions to empirical software engineering. Because the goal of such studies is to improve the state of the practice in industry, researchers must understand and account for the differences between university students and industrial professionals. One major difference identified is the amount of training and practice that students and professional may have when learning a new technique. We propose and test a method of allowing university subjects to cost-effectively gain experience to compensate for this difference. The results show that the proposed method for gaining experience provided subjects with enough experience to improve their effectiveness in some but not all cases. There was also an indication from the results that the proposed method allowed the subjects to become more comfortable with a new technique.
Index Terms:
Empirical study, requirements inspections, software process, experimental process, software quality
Citation:
Jeff Carver, Forrest Shull, Victor Basili, "Observational Studies to Accelerate Process Experience in Classroom Studies: An Evaluation," isese, pp.72, 2003 International Symposium on Empirical Software Engineering (ISESE'03), 2003
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