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SENG301 builds on the material introduced in SENG201 (Introduction to Software Engineering) and is intended as a companion course to SENG302 (Software Engineering Group Project). The focus is on quality and how to model, measure and maintain it as project size and complexity scale up.
Software Engineering II touches to advanced topics of software engineering including software development processes, team-based work, ethics, software quality, resilience engineering, software design and modelling. Students will learn about the principles behind software development processes (i.e. classical and Agile-based methods), software quality assurance through (automated) testing and deployment techniques as well as software design recipes.Active participation into the lectures and tutorials is expected to achieve good grades into the course. Lectures will contain regular activities to put into practice the theoretical content covered in lectures. Labs will feature extensive use of novel development technologies to write, debug, test and deploy software.
Describe, model, and understand software engineering processes.Select and enact appropriate processes for particular software development environments.Apply a range of software engineering techniques to develop, deploy and evolve large software systems.Function effectively in a professional software development environment.Think about ethical issues in software engineeringLearn, use and evaluate a range of software development tools.Synthesise new software designs.Recognise and correct design flaws in software.Understand and model the quality of software products and processes.Use software metrics to understand and improve large software systems and the processes used to develop them.Communicate effectively, in written and oral forms, knowledge and professional opinion.
SENG201. RP: COSC110 OR COSC101, ENCE260.
COSC314, COSC324
COSC110 OR COSC101, ENCE260.
Fabian Gilson
Neville Churcher
Gamma, Erich; Design patterns : elements of reusable object-oriented software ; Addison-Wesley, 1995.
Goldstein, Ilan; Scrum shortcuts without cutting corners : agile tactics, tools & tips ; Addison-Wesley, 2014.
Fenton, Norman E. , Pfleeger, Shari Lawrence; Software metrics : a rigorous and practical approach ; 2nd ed; International Thomson Computer Press ; PWS Publishing, 1997.
Fowler, Martin , Beck, Kent; Refactoring : improving the design of existing code ; Addison-Wesley, 1999.
Pressman, Roger S. , Maxim, Bruce R; Software engineering : a practitioner's approach ; Eighth edition; McGraw-Hill Education, 2015.
Course Information on Learn
There are several important documents available online about departmental regulations, policies and guidelines at the following site. We expect all students to be familiar with these. Notices about this class will be posted to the class forum in the Learn system.COSC students will also be made members of a class called “CSSE Notices”, where general notices will be posted that apply to all classes (such as information about building access or job opportunities).
The Computer Science department's grading policy states that in order to pass a course you must meet two requirements:1. You must achieve an average grade of at least 50% over all assessment items.2. You must achieve an average mark of at least 45% on invigilated assessment items.If you satisfy both these criteria, your grade will be determined by the following University- wide scale for converting marks to grades: an average mark of 50% is sufficient for a C- grade, an average mark of 55% earns a C grade, 60% earns a B- grade and so forth. However if you do not satisfy both the passing criteria you will be given either a D or E grade depending on marks. Marks are sometimes scaled to achieve consistency between courses from year to year.Students may apply for special consideration if their performance in an assessment is affected by extenuating circumstances beyond their control.Applications for special consideration should be submitted via the Examinations Office website within five days of the assessment. Where an extension may be granted for an assessment, this will be decided by direct application to the Department and an application to the Examinations Office may not be required. Special consideration is not available for items worth less than 10% of the course.Students prevented by extenuating circumstances from completing the course after the final date for withdrawing, may apply for special consideration for late discontinuation of the course. Applications must be submitted to the Examinations Office within five days of the end of the main examination period for the semester.
Domestic fee $986.00
International fee $5,500.00
* All fees are inclusive of NZ GST or any equivalent overseas tax, and do not include any programme level discount or additional course-related expenses.
This course will not be offered if fewer than 10 people apply to enrol.
For further information see Computer Science and Software Engineering .