Here are some suggested resources that came out of a Certified ScrumMaster course that Jim York and I just led.
Books
On the Web
http://www.mountaingoatsoftware.com/
http://www.planningpoker.com/
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/scrumdevelopment/ -- The Scrum-Dev yahoo discussion group. Enter with salt.
Articles
New New Product Development Game by Takeuchi and Nonaka. (See http://www.hbr.com/) This is the article that directly led to Scrum (along with other sources). It also gave Scrum its name.
Key Words
Kaikaku - a rapid or radical change event (such as the initial implementation of Scrum)
Kaizen - continuous improvement (also used to refer to continuous improvement actions)
"Go to the Gemba" - Gemba in Japanese means "actual place" or the place where truth is. Similarities to the Godfather phrase "Go to the mattresses". With "go to the Gemba" we are typically asking a manager to go visit the Agile Team Room.
Genchi Genbutsu - Japanese for "Go and see for yourself". More roughly translated as "don't manage from behind a desk". In Agile, we might say, "Come to the demo and see for yourself" to a stakeholder. Or, to a manager "if you want to really know how the project is going, come to the Daily Standup or come to an Iteration Review." Closely related to "go to the Gemba" and Gemba Attitude. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genchi_Genbutsu
The ScrumMaster role:
"...whose end, both at the first and now, was and is, to hold as 'twere the
mirror up to nature: to show virtue her feature, scorn her own
image, and the very age and body of the time his form and
pressure." Hamlet. (That's a lot of what a ScrumMaster does.)
Pictures
Communications Nodes PDF. See http://agileconsortium.pbwiki.com/Presentations
The idea here is to show why we need small teams.
See also earlier posts tagged Recommended Reading.
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