Integration Evaluation Team
- Integration Evaluation Team
- the team that
evaluates the deliverable
integration work products
and the integration process that was used to produce them
As illustrated in the preceding figure, Integration Evaluation Team is part of the following inheritance hierarchy:
- Type: Concrete
- Superclass: Evaluation Team
- Subclasses:
The typical team-specific responsibilities of an Integration Evaluation Team are to:
- Evaluate the integration work products produced by the:
The integration evaluation team typically inherits the
common team responsibilities from the
team method component.
The Integration Evaluation Team typically consists of persons playing the following roles:
- Technical Leader,
who facilitates the evaluation meeting and evaluates the integration work products for technical quality.
- System Architect,
who evaluates the integration plan to ensure that it covers the integration of all system components.
- Test Engineer,
who evaluates the integration plan to ensure that integration will enable system testing.
- Quality Engineer,
who evaluates the work products for quality and conformance to the endeavor process and relevant conventions.
- Technical Writer,
- Acts as scribe at the evaluation meeting(s).
- Summarizes the evaluation team’s findings in the
evaluation summary report.
- Delivers the evaluation summary report to the:
The Integration Evaluation Team typically performs the following
team-specific tasks in an incremental, iterative, parallel, and time-boxed manner:
The integration evaluation team typically inherits the
common team tasks from the
team method component.
The Integration Evaluation Team typically produces the following work products:
- Evaluations should not devolve into walkthroughs that require the work products’ developers
to explain them to the evaluators. The work products should stand on their own.
- To the extent practical, the developers of a work product should:
- Not be the only evaluators of it.
- Also informally inspect it prior to the evaluation.
- A single person may play multiple roles on an evaluation team if
he or she has the necessary expertise to fulfill multiple roles.
This is especially true on small endeavors.
- An architecture evaluation team typically inherits the
common team guidelines from the
team method component.