A core module of the ISEB Diploma in Business AnalysisPrice
Course fee - Member: £956.25 + VAT
Course fee - non-Member:
£1125 + VAT
Exam fee: £105 + VAT (exam is optional)
Includes lunch and course materials
Fees quoted are for non-residential delegates. Please contact 0161 242 2121 for residential costs and in-house courses options.
In addition to Public Courses, we can also offer in-company training, at your premises. Please call 0161 242 2121 for details.
Overview
Perhaps the most common
reason for failure of IT development projects is that of a lack of clear understanding
of true requirements. This course is aimed at those involved in eliciting and
recording user requirements. The course defines the types of requirements, the
people involved in managing the elicitation process, techniques of requirements
analysis and ways of prioritising requirements.
Course Objectives
Upon
successful completion of this course, delegates will be able to:
- Act
as effective members of a team involved in eliciting and recording user requirements
for an information system
- Recognise the nature of the requirements
and the knowledge type to which they belong and to select and use an appropriate
elicitation technique
- Be familiar with a range of elicitation techniques
and know how to apply them effectively
- Record and prioritise requirements,
and be able to recognise and help resolve conflicting requirements
- Link
project objectives/requiremnts to business case
- Be aware of what
CASE support exists for Requirements Specification
Professional
Qualification
This course is one of an integrated set of courses leading
to the widely respected British Computer Society Information Systems Examination
Board (ISEB) Diploma in Business Systems Development.
Optional Examination
An optional examination can be taken at venues across the UK. The exam consists
of 15 minutes reading time followed by a one-hour 'open book' written examination.
The examination is charged for separately. Successful candidates are awarded the
ISEB Business Systems Development Certificate in Requirements Engineering
Syllabus Overview
Lifecycle for Business Change
- Business plans and objectives
Nature of Requirements
Hierarchy of Requirements
- The business rationale
- Terms of Reference / Project Initiation Document (PID)
- Functional requirements / Non-functional requirements
- General / Technical Requirements - relationship with Business Case
- Service Level Agreements
Stakeholders in the Requirements process
- Project stakeholder
- Project Manager
- BusinessAnalyst
- Developer
- Business
Stakeholders
- Project sponsor
- Domain Expert
- End users and managers
- External stakeholders
- Customers
- Regulators
- Suppliers
Requirements Elicitation
- Knowledge types - tacit, non-tacit
- Elicitation techniques:
- Interview
- Workshops
- Observation
- Formal/ Informal
- Shadowing
- Ethnographic study
- Prototyping
- Scenarios
- DocumentAnalysis
- Special
Purpose records
- Questionnaires
- Mapping techniques to the situation
Use of models in requirements engineering
- Developing a process / functional model
- Read a static (data) model
Documenting the requirements
Requirements catalogue:
- Id
- Description
- Acceptance criteria
- Source / owner
- Rationale / Benefits
- Non-functional requirements
- Priority
- Related requirements/documents
- Version Control / Status
Requirements Analysis
Prioritising requirements:
- Congruence with business objectives
- Overlapping requirements
- Identifying and negotiating conflicts between requirements
- Requirements ambiguity
- Requirements realism / feasibility
- Requirements testability
Requirements Validation
- Reviews
- Prototyping
- Sign-off requirements document
Requirements Management
- Stable and volatile requirements
- Management of change to requirements
- Traceability and ownership
- CASE for Requirements Specification
Benefits Confirmation
- Requirements testing/User acceptance testing
- Post-implementation review
- Roles of requirements actors
This is the revised syllabus
for the ISEB Certificate in Requirements Engineering which can lead to
the Diploma in Business Analysis.
More details, including dates are available on the NCC Membership website


