This content is only partially available in English.
This content is only partially available in English.

Agile working with Scrum

The teams at work, photo: i3mainz, CC BY-SA 4.0

The teams at work, photo: i3mainz, CC BY-SA 4.0

Students of the degree program Applied Informatics practice agile project management with Scrum

With his students in the Project Management module, who are in their third semester of the Applied Informatics degree program, Thomas Klauer organized an approximately 3-hour Lego Scrum workshop with the IT consultancy bridgingIT from Frankfurt to teach agile procedures in IT project management.

Die Teams bei der Arbeit, Fotos: i3mainz, CC BY-SA 4.0    Die Teams bei der Arbeit, Fotos: i3mainz, CC BY-SA 4.0

Using the example of a Lego city, the students were instructed to implement a project in an agile manner using the Scrum method. Divided into three groups, they each had the task of building a part of the city. They implemented the prewritten user stories in several sprints of seven minutes each. Each sprint was planned in a sprint planning session and evaluated after implementation in a sprint review and a sprint retrospective. During implementation, the groups had to coordinate with each other to form interconnecting edges and swap components.

Die Teams bei der Arbeit, Fotos: i3mainz, CC BY-SA 4.0    Die Teams bei der Arbeit, Fotos: i3mainz, CC BY-SA 4.0

In actual software projects, a sprint usually lasts two weeks. Software is developed that is delivered after each sprint in the form of a functional (partial) product. Among other things, the students learned about the Scrum roles Scrum Master and Product Owner and got a bit closer to the agile mindset, such as welcoming changes, understanding mistakes as learning opportunities, and focusing on the customer.

A big thank-you to the company bridgingIT, which, after a short introduction of the company, held the workshop with four colleagues at Mainz University of Applied Sciences.