"This all-inclusive text integrates the "soft skills" of working with an open-source software client with the "hard skills" of Web application development in PHP, while supporting faculty with project identification and development."
Janet Davis, Whitman College, Walla Walla, WA, USA
"Client-Centered Software Development: The CO-FOSS Approach provides a practical instructional roadmap for engaging students in experiential learning about software development. The text is enriched by hard-won experiences gleaned from years of tuning the authors' approach." Jim Bowring, Associate Professor, Department of Computer Science, College of Charleston
"This book is a practical and valuable guide for students and faculty to engage in Open Source Software projects. The CO-FOSS model should inspire a new generation of faculty and students to make a difference in their local communities and the world." Steven Huss-Lederman, Open Energy Dashboard
"Working with Allen and his students was an invaluable experience. As a small non-profit the opportunity to tailor our own database to our distinct needs benefited us greatly. Our volunteers(the users) are able to easily negotiate the system and as a result we have maintained a vibrant volunteer base!" Joanna A. Powers, Volunteer Coordinator. Ronald McDonald House of Providence, Inc., Providence, RI
"Under Allen Tucker's leadership, he and his students created a state-of-the-art- software program to help track food rescue in the Lowcountry. Working with volunteers at various levels of technical expertise, this simple and effective tool enables Second Helpings, a food rescue agency that rescued over three million pounds of food in 2018, to document over 300 volunteers, 30 food donors, 60 recipient agencies and millions of pounds of food rescued annually by category. HOMEPLATE has been made it easy for the staff to communicate with all these audiences. It is invaluable in collecting data that is needed to grow financial support for the agency and to fight hunger in our community. We also document interaction with all audiences inside this software. SIMPLE, SMART and FREE are three attributes that have made a big difference for Second Helpings. We are indebted to Allen Tucker for his continued support and expertise."Lili Coleman, Executive Director, Second Helpings, Hilton Head Island, SC
"This teaching volume offers a complete guide to support an instructor, students, a volunteer real-world client, and a pro bono developer in jointly completing a customized, non-commercial software development project, providing a one-semester capstone course curriculum for upper-division majors in computer science. By incorporating the roles of all parties involved, Tucker demonstrates how formalizing roles through "user stories" can continue to refine the requirements-gathering process as a new system is actually being developed and tested. Tucker's unique contribution is in designing a case study to teach habits of continuous learning and the value of approaching software development as a form of humanitarian effort to future general practitioners of the art."
F. H. Wild III, University of Rhode Island
"This all-inclusive text integrates the "soft skills" of working with an open-source software client with the "hard skills" of Web application development in PHP, while supporting faculty with project identification and development."
Janet Davis, Whitman College, Walla Walla, WA, USA
"Client-Centered Software Development: The CO-FOSS Approach provides a practical instructional roadmap for engaging students in experiential learning about software development. The text is enriched by hard-won experiences gleaned from years of tuning the authors' approach." Jim Bowring, Associate Professor, Department of Computer Science, College of Charleston
"This book is a practical and valuable guide for students and faculty to engage in Open Source Software projects. The CO-FOSS model should inspire a new generation of faculty and students to make a difference in their local communities and the world." Steven Huss-Lederman, Open Energy Dashboard
"Working with Allen and his students was an invaluable experience. As a small non-profit the opportunity to tailor our own database to our distinct needs benefited us greatly. Our volunteers(the users) are able to easily negotiate the system and as a result we have maintained a vibrant volunteer base!" Joanna A. Powers, Volunteer Coordinator. Ronald McDonald House of Providence, Inc., Providence, RI
"Under Allen Tucker's leadership, he and his students created a state-of-the-art- software program to help track food rescue in the Lowcountry. Working with volunteers at various levels of technical expertise, this simple and effective tool enables Second Helpings, a food rescue agency that rescued over three million pounds of food in 2018, to document over 300 volunteers, 30 food donors, 60 recipient agencies and millions of pounds of food rescued annually by category. HOMEPLATE has been made it easy for the staff to communicate with all these audiences. It is invaluable in collecting data that is needed to grow financial support for the agency and to fight hunger in our community. We also document interaction with all audiences inside this software. SIMPLE, SMART and FREE are three attributes that have made a big difference for Second Helpings. We are indebted to Allen Tucker for his continued support and expertise."Lili Coleman, Executive Director, Second Helpings, Hilton Head Island, SC
"This teaching volume offers a complete guide to support an instructor, students, a volunteer real-world client, and a pro bono developer in jointly completing a customized, non-commercial software development project, providing a one-semester capstone course curriculum for upper-division majors in computer science. By incorporating the roles of all parties involved, Tucker demonstrates how formalizing roles through "user stories" can continue to refine the requirements-gathering process as a new system is actually being developed and tested. Tucker's unique contribution is in designing a case study to teach habits of continuous learning and the value of approaching software development as a form of humanitarian effort to future general practitioners of the art."
F. H. Wild III, University of Rhode Island