The Impact of Background and Experience on Software Inspections
Empirical Software Engineering
Information and Software Technology
The Social Nature of Agile Teams
AGILE '07 Proceedings of the AGILE 2007
The XP Customer Team: A Grounded Theory
AGILE '09 Proceedings of the 2009 Agile Conference
Exploring language in software process elicitation: A grounded theory approach
ESEM '09 Proceedings of the 2009 3rd International Symposium on Empirical Software Engineering and Measurement
Moving into a new software project landscape
Proceedings of the 32nd ACM/IEEE International Conference on Software Engineering - Volume 1
Organizing self-organizing teams
Proceedings of the 32nd ACM/IEEE International Conference on Software Engineering - Volume 1
Balancing acts: walking the Agile tightrope
Proceedings of the 2010 ICSE Workshop on Cooperative and Human Aspects of Software Engineering
Proceedings of the ACM international conference on Object oriented programming systems languages and applications
Developing a grounded theory to explain the practices of self-organizing Agile teams
Empirical Software Engineering
Joint implicit alignment work of interaction designers and software developers
Proceedings of the 7th Nordic Conference on Human-Computer Interaction: Making Sense Through Design
An exploration of factors influencing tertiary IT educators' pedagogies
ACE '12 Proceedings of the Fourteenth Australasian Computing Education Conference - Volume 123
Hi-index | 0.00 |
Grounded Theory (GT) is increasingly being used to study the human aspects of Software Engineering. Unfortunately, the Grounded Theory method is still not widely understood in the Software Engineering discipline. We present an overview of the Grounded Theory method and discuss its use.