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10

_____finds their origin in Extreme Programming and are described as ‘A story or task aimed at answering a question or gathering information, rather than at producing shippable product’.

Spike

10

Another name for Huddle, It's not the place for problem-solving, nor is it a status update 

Daily Scrum

10

A term Pertaining to or based on experience. Scrum is an _____________ framework

Empirical/Empiricism

10

Negotiated, defined by User Stories, scheduled in the Release Plan, and focused.

Scope

10

Document contains the rules of scrum framework

Scrum Guide

20

This is the value of the current work plus all of the value of work previously done

Increment

20

An acronym coined by Bill Wake, used to evaluate the quality of user stories

INVEST

20

The version of a new product which allows a team to collect the maximum amount of validated learning about customers with the least effort

Minimum Viable Product (MVP)

20

In 2001 twenty software engineers gathered in __________  and published this document describing a now famous approach to software development.

Snowbird Ski Resort, Utah - Agile Manifesto

20

According to Abraham Lincoln, this is what transforms a promise into a reality.

Commitment

30

Picture 9

Identify the name of this framwork?

Cynefin Framework

The Cynefin framework is a conceptual framework used to aid decision-making. Created in 1999 by Dave Snowden when he worked for IBM Global Services, it has been described as a "sense-making device".

30

This is the team within a team that was removed in 2020's Scrum Guide revisions.

Development team

30

Picture 8

Identify this picture

Value Stream Mapping
30

This describes a future state of the product which can serve as a target for the Scrum Team to plan against

Product Goal

30

As Scrum Teams mature, it is expected it will expand to include more stringent criteria for higher quality

Definition of Done

40

Picture 6

Identify this Agile model?

DSDM

40

is a prioritization model used to sequence jobs (for example, Features, Capabilities, and Epics) to produce maximum economic benefit. In SAFe,  this  is estimated as the Cost of Delay (CoD) divided by the job duration.
 

Weighted Shortest Job First (WSJF)

Weighted Shortest Job First (WSJF) is a tool used in the Scaled Agile Framework (SAFe) to help teams prioritize a list of initiatives. A team calculates each initiative’s score as the cost of delay divided by the job’s size or duration. The team then prioritizes those items that receive the highest ratings.

40

A chart which shows the amount of work which has been completed. Time is shown on the horizontal axis and work completed on the vertical axis.

Burn up Chart

40

The relationship between latency, throughput, and work-in-progress is established by this law

Little's law

John Little, a Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) professor, invented his theorem in 1954. He called it Little’s law and first applied the formula to queues in shops. Later, it turned out that anything that can queue – and, yes, this includes software tasks – is applicable to Little’s law.

Project management, Kanban boards, software development, retail, and even manufacturing can use this handy formula.

40

Picture 7

Identify this picture


3CS- Card,Conversation, Confirmation


model is proposed by Ron Jeffries( 2001) to distinguish “social” user stories from “documentary” requirements practices such as use cases

50

Picture 1

Identify it? Name of this add in feature in Jira

Stateoscope

50

Picture 2

Name of this Report/Diagram?

Cumulative Flow diagram

50

Picture 3

Identify it?

Artifact
50

Picture 4

Identify this diagram

Cone of Uncertainity

In project management, the Cone of Uncertainty describes the evolution of the amount of best case uncertainty during a project. At the beginning of a project, comparatively little is known about the product or work results, and so estimates are subject to large uncertainty

50

Picture 5

Identify this model

Kano prioritization model


Dr. Noriaki Kano, a professor of quality management at the Tokyo University of Science, created the Kano Model in 1984.The model identifies five categories of potential customer reactions to a new feature, ranging from dissatisfaction to indifference, all the way up to what many call customer delight or excitement features.