Dear all,
Below you may find the guideline for the presentations. The schedule will be announced shortly, and the attendance for all sessions is mandatory (regardless of you are presenting or not).
Presentation Outline (10 minutes)
1. Opening
Introduce yourself and your topic
State project title clearly.
Briefly explain why this factor/component matters in Software Quality Assurance (SQA).
2. Background & Context
Scope and Objectives
Summarize the scope of the report.
Highlight the main objectives.
Architectural Context
- Place your chosen factor/component within the broader SQA system (six classes).
3. Core Analysis
Depending on whether they chose Option A (Quality Factor) or Option B (SQA Component):
If Option A (Quality Factor):
Definition & Classification
Define the factor (e.g., Reliability, Efficiency).
Classify it and compare it with related factors
Associated Criteria, Subfactors and Metrics
Present at least 2–3 measurable subfactors and relevant metrics.
Show how these key metrics support the quality process.
Relevant Activities for QA
Mention reviews, testing, audits, etc.
Definition & Classification
Define the component (e.g., Audits, Reviews).
Classify it in Galin’s architecture.
Objectives & Contribution
State its purpose and contribution to SQA.
Process & Methodology
Outline how it works (steps, responsibilities).
Documentation & Tools (1 min)
Mention supporting artifacts (reports, checklists).
Role in Assurance Areas
Explain contribution to IEEE 730 assurance areas.
4. Conclusion & Recommendations
Summary of Findings
Recap the critical insights.
Importance to Quality Culture
Stress how it supports “zero defects” and “right first time.”
Recommendations
Suggest practical improvements (training, tools, clearer goals).
📌 Presentation Guidelines
Time discipline: Stick to 10 minutes. Allocate ~2-3 min per slide/topic. Distribute the slides in your team evenly, everyone should talk!
Slide design:
Use 5–7 slides maximum (exc. cover page and Q&A).
Keep slides visual (diagrams, bullet points, icons).
Avoid text-heavy slides; highlight keywords.
Delivery tips:
Start with a strong opening (why this topic matters).
Use examples or metrics to make abstract concepts concrete.
Maintain eye contact and clear voice projection.
End with a memorable takeaway (e.g., “Reliability is not optional—it’s the backbone of trust in software”).
Q&A readiness:
Prepare 2–3 likely questions to ask the audience, you may choose randomly whom to answer.
Keep your answers ready (concise and evidence-based).