When we talk about Scrum-teams and their interdisciplinary performance, it seems like many of us, have this team of experts in mind, which are theoretically able to fulfill every role and could do every job in the team. Unicorns, dragons, chimeras, wizards,... we call them.
From my point of view- these team members sound a lot like Nessi or the yeti – they may very well exist - it’s just that I have never seen them.
We often have a good mix in our team - some members are more junior than senior, which struggle with the software, the framework, themselves, additional tools,... others have specialties in one thing and only shallow understanding in others – and that is ok!
I’m working as a SCRUM master in a test automation project that struggles with multiple steep learning curves as we tackle understanding the product under test, building up our skill set and learning to function as a team.
Given this particular context, the Product Owner and me have experimented applying my deep understanding of the theory of learning and putting it in practice in a team consisting of real people, real challenges and real learning needs resulting in an honest and valuable experience report.
I’d like to share some insights on how to train people within the project to make the group more homogenous in terms of knowledge sharing and teaching each other. Therefore the Product Owner and me include learning and especially learning goals into the backlog and apply SCRUM methods to them..
In my talk I will show you how, together, we moved the team forward in terms of learning and confidence. You will find out how to free up time to learn, set clear expectations and do a proper debriefing on learning goals.
- a general level of agility is required
- attendees get another methode how to train their teams - how to grow together as a team and what an agile learning coach can do for them
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Dr. Vera Gehlen-Baum is
Submitted by Vera Gehlen-Baum on Tue, 2019-05-21 07:34
Dr. Vera Gehlen-Baum is TeamLead for QualityLearning and CEO at QualityMinds. She studied pedagogy with the subsidiary subjects psychology and computer science at the LMU Munich and did her doctorate in 2016 on the subject of learning with new media. Vera Gehlen-Baum has been working for more than 7 years as ProductOwner, Test- and ScrumMaster. In 2018 she gave a talk in front of the UN about her favorite topic: agile learning
Re: Dr. Vera Gehlen-Baum is
Submitted by Vera Gehlen-Baum on Tue, 2019-05-21 07:42
Sorry for the additional comment - got confused by the format and couldn't delete it afterwards