Student Feedback
The professor is good but somewhat disorganized and tends to go off on tangents, often sharing personal and professional experiences. While these moments were valuable to me personally — since I’m very interested in Scrum and Software Engineering — they might feel boring and somewhat irrelevant to students who aren't as invested in the field and are just looking for an easier course.
Overall, the workload is light. I would say you’ll spend at most 4–5 hours per week on this course.
The evaluation is almost entirely based on a project that you develop using Scrum, and there are...
The reviews below this point may be outdated. Course content, teaching methods, and requirements may have changed since then.
This is an old course, given by an old professor that is stuck in the old times... ## Syllabus You learn a bunch of techniques for project management: lifecycle models, time management, organization management, cost/resource management, risk management, etc., all mostly from a waterfall perspective. Most of the techniques you learn can be applied beyond software projects. They’re useful for managing almost any type of project. ## Project The project is about managing a fictional project where you apply all these techniques, and it’s actually kinda fun....