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Philanthropic conference-based requirements engineering in time of pandemic and beyondoa mark
  • Levy, Meira ;
  • Hadar, Irit ;
  • Horkoff, Jennifer ;
  • Hayes, Jane Huffman ;
  • Paech, Barbara ;
  • Dekhtyar, Alex ;
  • Mussbacher, Gunter ;
  • Paja, Elda ;
  • Li, Tong ;
  • Lee, Seok Won ;
  • Fang, Dongfeng
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Publication Year
2023-06-01
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH
Citation
Requirements Engineering, Vol.28, pp.213-227
Keyword
COVID-19Hybrid eventsPandemicPhilanthropic projectsRequirements engineeringStakeholders
Mesh Keyword
Engineering communityEngineering practitionersHuman valuesHybrid eventInternational expertsLearning experiencesPandemicPhilanthropic projectRequirement engineeringStakeholder
All Science Classification Codes (ASJC)
SoftwareInformation Systems
Abstract
As software engineering (SE) practitioners, we can help society by using our communities of experts to address a software need of a socially conscious organization. Doing so can benefit society in the locale of a SE conference and provide access to international experts for local organizations. Furthermore, established SE researchers as well as practitioners and students have the opportunity for a unique learning experience. While the SE community has already realized the importance of addressing human values and promoting social good objectives in software development, we are unaware of previous attempts to leverage SE conferences for this activity. Conferences present an opportunity to enjoy the assembly of SE practitioners, researchers, and students for the purpose of a philanthropic endeavor. Over the past four years of running a “Requirements Engineering for Social Good” event called RE Cares, co-located with the International Conference on Requirements Engineering, we worked with the stakeholders local to the conference venue. We selected stakeholders who would not necessarily have ready access to requirements engineering, software design, and development expertise otherwise, to build software targeting “good causes.” In the last two years, this event was altered to adapt to the constraints induced by COVID-19, moving to a hybrid mode and changing many of its practices accordingly. This paper summarizes and generalizes our experiences, discussing our lessons learned in the context of the pandemic and beyond and providing a framework for conducting similar social contribution in any SE conferences in general.
Language
eng
URI
https://dspace.ajou.ac.kr/dev/handle/2018.oak/32927
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00766-022-00386-4
Fulltext

Type
Article
Funding
We are grateful to the organizers of the RE conference in 2020: Martin Glinz and Samuel Fricker, and 2021: Jane Cleland-Huang, and to the students who were part of the team and helped with the development efforts during RE Cares 2020 and 2021: Moath Azem, Greg Bisbjerg, Bader Daka, Tomer Gershoni, Michelle Jakab, and Jared Payne.
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Lee, Seok-Won이석원
Department of Software and Computer Engineering
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