Number of Pages : 122 leaves
Adviser : Prof. Maria Elizabeth Francisco
Abstract
In the past few years, technologies and technology companies have shifted their focus from innovating software development processes to the standardization of software and firmware development practices. The spotlight has moved from the schools of software development methodologies to the standards organizations that assess and measure the capabilities of software processes. Among these emerging standards for process assessment is Automotive SPICE or ASPICE. This study looks at the ASPICE standard's recommendation for software development and attempts to reconcile it with one of the most prevalent software development methodologies in the industry, Agile Scrum. In the course of this work, the main question that will be answered is how software development teams running Scrum can align and adapt Agile Scrum processes to ASPICE best practices and achieve acceptable process capability levels as prescribed by the ASPICE assessment model. Furthermore, this study will also delve into the tools that Scrum masters and managers can use to implement these processes, monitor progress and prepare for an ASPICE assessment. Through fact-finding research, informed analysis, and close readings of the ASPICE and Scrum concepts, requirements and rules, this study yields a very compelling narrative in which the ceremonies and artifacts of Scrum can effectively answer to the base practices and work products of ASPICE, with an assist or two from some supporting documents. As a result of this finding, the study goes on to compile a veritable toolbox of document templates and process guides that can help any Scrum master or manager navigate the rigorous ASPICE standards and run a robust and complete implementation of Agile Scrum.
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