Coordination in software development
Communications of the ACM
Splitting the organization and integrating the code: Conway's law revisited
Proceedings of the 21st international conference on Software engineering
Why distance matters: effects on cooperation, persuasion and deception
CSCW '02 Proceedings of the 2002 ACM conference on Computer supported cooperative work
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Software engineering project courses where student teams are geographically distributed can effectively simulate the problems of globally distributed software development (DSD). However, this pedagogical model has proven difficult to adopt or sustain. It requires significant pedagogical resources and collaboration infrastructure. Institutionalizing such courses also requires compatible and reliable teaching partners. The purpose of this workshop is to foster a community of international faculty and institutions committed to developing, supporting, and teaching DSD. Foundational materials presented will include pedagogical materials and infrastructure developed and used in teaching DSD courses along with results and lessons learned. Long-range goals include: lowering adoption barriers by providing common pedagogical materials, validated collaboration infrastructure, and a pool of potential teaching partners from around the globe.