Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
Forming a Winning Programming Team
Dr. Sallie Henry Computer Science Department Virginia Tech
2
Necessary Conditions for a Winning Team
A dedicated coach (willing to spend at least 10 hours a week) Dedicated team members (even if they won’t make the team THIS year) Support from either the Department, the local ACM or external source Do NOT expect miracles the first year
3
Step 1 Hold Local contest Individuals are competing against each other
Motivate the students to participate (prizes, food, etc.) 4-6 problems (of different types) 3 hours
4
Step 2 Selections of team(s) Choose at least 6 people Based on
Who wins the local Which problems are tackled first Year in school (freshman are great)
5
Step 3 Schedule at least 4 mini-practices Each 2 hours
Have 2 problems for each session Put people in teams of 3 (1 machine)
6
Step 4 Form teams based on the following
Strengths of team members (you don’t want 3 people with the same background) I like a Mathematics person and an Engineer Look at Personalities (see who can work well with others)
7
Step 5 Have one 5 hour practice each week
Compete like a real competition’ Use last year’s regional problems Feed the team during practice (get someone to pay for food. Have students estimate how long each problem will take
8
Step 5 (con’t) Have another student on the team check the results prior to a submission Take away egos Show them how bad their estimates are Attendance is mandatory
9
Step 6 Give homework Have EACH team member write a solution to each practice problem Collect each problem and source listing in a binder
10
Step 7 The next day Have one hour session
Discuss how to solve the problems Discuss the problem selection process Have members share ideas
11
Step 8 Enter at least 2 teams in the regional contest (more if you can) Make it clear which team is expected to win (make one team the strongest) The other teams are JV (in training for next year’s contest) Early bedtime the night before the region
12
Step 9 WIN THE REGION
13
Step 10 Practices after Christmas Each week, one 5 hour practice
The JV teams must attend Use prior finals problems Homework continues and the binders are getting bigger
14
Step 11 Trip to Library Find formula books, algorithm books, etc.
Assign readings for each student Have the team understand the KNOW the information in the books
15
Step 12 Get team ready for finals
Buy the team “shirts” with school name on it so that they can look like a TEAM during finals.
16
Step 13 HAVE FUN Meet people (your peers) from other institutions
Look like a team!! Take the team out for a nice dinner the night before Finals. Early bedtime
17
Step 14 Recruit MONEY To by food (breakfast, lunch and/or dinner) during practices Buy necessary books for the finals Buy “team shirts” Pay for the NICE dinner
18
Step 15 How to get money Department Local ACM
Organizations who hire your students
19
QUESTIONS
20
Software Development Teams Evaluation
Sallie Henry Virginia Tech
21
Keirsey scale profiles
Study I E N S F T P J General 25 75 50 Lyons 67 33 54 46 19 81 34 66 Stevens study 60 40 44 56 38 62 26 74 Current study 64 36 35 65 39 61 28 72
22
Software Engineering Team Models
Individual Programmer – Mills Chief Programmer – Mills Surgical Team – Brooks Egoless Team - Weinberg Extreme Programming - Beck
23
Belbin’s Team Roles History
Developed by Meredith Belbin in 1981 at Henley, England after nine years of study Designed to define and predict success of management teams Widely used in Europe Applied successfully, but widely criticized. Measured with the “Self Perception Inventory” (SPI)
24
Belbin’s Team Roles Role Typical Features Positive Qualities
Allowable Weakness Chairman Calm, self-confident, controlled. A capacity for treating and welcoming all potential contributors on their merits and without prejudice. A strong sense of objectives. No more than ordinary in terms of intellect or creative ability. Shaper Highly-strung, outgoing, dynamic. Drive and readiness to challenge inertia, ineffectiveness, complacency or self-deception. Proneness to provocation, irritation and impatience. Plant Individualistic, serious-minded, unorthodox. Genius, imagination, intellect, knowledge. Up in the clouds, inclined to disregard practical details or protocol. Monitor-Evaluator Sober, unemotional, prudent. Judgment discretion, hard-headedness. Lacks inspiration or the ability to motivate others.
25
Belbin’s Team Roles Role Typical Features Positive Qualities
Allowable Weakness Resource Investigator Extroverted, enthusiastic, curious, communicative. A capacity for contacting people and exploring anything new. An ability to respond to challenge. Liable to lose interest once the initial fascination has passed. Company Worker Conservative, dutiful, predictable. Organizing ability, practical common sense, hard working, self-discipline. Lack of flexibility, unresponsiveness to unproven ideas. Team Worker Socially oriented, rather mild, sensitive. An ability to respond to people and to situations, and to promote team spirit. Indecisiveness at moments of crisis. Completer- Finisher Painstaking, orderly, conscientious, anxious. A capacity for follow-through. Perfectionism. A tendency to worry about small things. A reluctance to “let go”.
26
Belbin’s Team Roles For each individual, there may be multiple roles
Belbin: “Primary” and “Secondary” roles If primary role is already filled, may gravitate toward secondary role “Strength” of roles. blah
27
The “Self-Perception Inventory” (SPI)
Appeared first in Belbin’s 1981 Book Criticisms Computer Science Validity Defenses Positive Field Results Confirmed Construct Validity Significant Experimental Results Use in Industry
28
Previous Results Shaper / Leadership Plant Monitor – Evaluator
One is better than two or none. Plant Presence is better than absence Monitor – Evaluator No conclusive results flawed experiment ?
29
The Company Worker The implementer
Theory suggests that this role may affect success But this premise was not backed up experimentally
30
Theoretic mapping of MBTI to Belbin
Belbin Role Keirsey CH EXXX ME IXTX SH CW XXXX PL TW RI EXXX* CF IXXX*
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.