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User Stories and Tasks – Part 6

Independent

For a user story to be independent, it must address a specific action and contain all parts to fulfill that action. If a user story contains only a small portion of a process, it may depend on other actions to accomplish that goal. In that case, the user story is not independent. Alternatively, a user story may contain numerous actions that could each be an individual user story. These multiple actions should be split out into their own respective user stories.

A good judge of independence for a user story is to examine what a product will look like when that user story is finished. If that feature needs more work before it improves the value of the product, the user story may need more content to be independent. When the user story is finished, if the product has working new functionality, that user story likely satisfies the independence criteria.

Negotiable

A user story is negotiable if nuance and detail are left to the team to figure out. A good user story only hits the highlights, including the most valuable and critical details of a feature. Since most of the details about a feature are up for debate, the team can discuss the best way to implement the feature. During the development process, details about the user story should fall into place, while the team satisfies the criteria that are explicitly stated in the user story.

59 Seconds Training Video

Master of Agile – Agile Scrum Tester With 59 Seconds Agile (Video Training Course)

Introductory Offer: Free Course

Master of Agile – Agile Scrum Tester With 59 Seconds Agile (Video Training Course)

What is this course?

This ‘Master of Agile – Agile Scrum Tester With 59 Seconds Agile (Video Training Course)’ provides an in-depth understanding of the Agile Scrum Tester roles and responsibilities

You will explore the Agile Scrum project life-cycle, including how an Agile User Story is created, to how we know when it is ‘done’

This course is aimed at those with or without prior knowledge and experience of the Agile values and principles

During this course you will learn the tools needed to succeed as an Agile Scrum Tester

What will you learn?

You will gain an in-depth understanding of the Agile Scrum Tester roles and responsibilities, and you will be able to

  • Fully understand the role of the Agile Scrum Tester
  • Understand the roles involved in an Agile project
  • Create an effective Product Backlog
  • Effectively participate in Scrum Meetings such as the Daily Stand-up, Sprint Review and Retrospective
  • Identify the roles involves in the Scrum Team
  • Fully understand the role of the Agile Scrum Developer
  • Understand the roles involved in an Agile project
  • Create an effective Product Backlog
  • Effectively participate in Scrum Meetings such as the Daily Stand-up, Sprint Review and Retrospective
  • Identify the roles involves in the Scrum Team

What topics are covered within this course

You will cover the following topics during this course:

  1. An Introduction to Agile Project Management (Tester)
  2. The 12 Agile Principles (Tester)
  3. Introduction to Scrum (Tester)
  4. Scrum Projects (Tester)
  5. Scrum Project Roles (Tester)
  6. Quality in Agile (Tester)
  7. Acceptance Criteria and the Prioritised Product Backlog (Tester)
  8. Quality Management in Scrum (Tester)
  9. Epics and Personas (Tester)
  10. Planning in Scrum (Tester)
  11. Scrum Boards (Tester)
  12. User Stories (Tester)
  13. The Daily Scrum (Tester)
  14. The Product Backlog (Tester)
  15. Review and Retrospective (Tester)
  16. Validating a Sprint (Tester)

Our Book Recommendations

We found these books great for finding out more information on Agile Scrum:

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