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COMP2001/2011 HNC Individual Project Module Leader - Pam Watt
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Aims of the Module To help students integrate the skills and knowledge acquired during the course to produce detailed system requirements, and systems analysis to a realistic problem.
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Module Content In completing this module, students should be able to demonstrate that they have the ability to: 1. Investigate & plan a project 2. Develop a project 3. Devise verification & test data 4. Evaluate their work
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Teaching Lecture in weeks 1 & 2 Additional skills gained from COMP2013 Professional Standards Students must work individually with guidance from the supervisor
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Deliverables 1. Submission of proposal (Thurs 14 Oct) 2. System Investigation (Thurs 18 Nov) 3. Development of project (Thurs 9 Dec) 4. Demonstration (week 12) Warning! Late work, without prior agreement with supervisor, will be capped at 40%.
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Choose your project Choose a real life project if possible Or choose from the suggested list Agree topic with supervisor Formulate a project plan
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System Investigation Fact finding Document findings Re-visit & refine project plan
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System Development System analysis System documentation Discussion document of s/ware & h/ware Verification document Critical evaluation of project DEMONSTRATION
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What do you do during Systems Analysis? ‘Systems analysis’ is often used as the name of a project phase that includes: –investigating a situation –recording what you have learned in the form of notes and models –analysing your notes and models in more detail –producing a specification of requirements for a new system—i.e. what it must do to meet its users’ needs
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What do you do during Systems Analysis? (cont’d) Sometimes the analysis phase is split into: –Fact-finding and recording –Requirements analysis Abstract modelling notations are fundamental to all analysis activities In UML the main ones are: –Use Case Diagram –Class Diagram
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Fact-Finding Techniques Background Reading Interviewing Document Sampling Observation Questionnaires
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Fact-Finding Techniques Remembering the techniques: –S... (for Sampling) –Q... (for Questionnaires) –I... (for Interviewing) –R... (for Reading or Research) –O... (for Observation) Not in order of importance, or sequence in the project
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Fact Recording Requirements must be carefully documented Analyst’s notes must be: –summarised –organised –filed One way to do this is to use a CASE tool –E.g. a set of use case diagrams and descriptions
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Resources Handbook website http://www.cse.dmu.ac.uk/~pw Books Object-Orientated Systems Analysis & Design Bennett, McRobb & Farmer (McGraw-Hill) The Essence of Computer projects - A student’s guide CW Dawson (Prentice-Hall)
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