Team Charter
From EDURange
Scoping Outline:
Challenges:
- What: "Create ways to..." / "Redesign the..."
- Provide a product that supports creating and delivering custom computer lab exercises.
- For Whom: "For <user>... (considering <other stakeholders>)..."
- Anyone who wants to learn cybersecurity and other computer science topics, especially instructors administering labs for class.
- Context: "In a world where..." / "Keeping in mind that..."
- It is difficult to set up a computer lab, it can be tedious and repetitive.
Considerations:
- Goals: "We aim to..."
- Automate it [What is it? Orchestration? Authoring? Administration? Managing student interaction?].
- Improve student outcomes [In or outside our own system? Do we care?].
- Provide building blocks for others to create content.
- Crux: "We really need to..."
- Understand how students learn.
Framing Checklist:
We should discuss these qualities:
- You tried on some behaviors (like empathy and rapid prototyping) on a current project before launching a new one.
- Project is a human, subjective challenge (understanding people is key to the project success).
- Project is geared toward discovery (not optimization).
- Challenge can be solved with a product, service, or event, not a strategy or system (for your first project).
- Not our first project, and we can practice concrete solutions in more narrowly scoped projects to begin immediately.
- Those most affected by the work are acknowledged as actors with agency, not simply receivers of outcomes.
- Framing doesn’t embed a solution.
- Framing doesn’t (unintentionally) assume the form of the solution.
- Framing doesn’t (unintentionally) presume people’s needs.
- Goal of the project work is clear without dictating the specific solution outcome.
- You and your team actually care about this challenge. (If not, why are you doing it?)
Note: Teams/Products Are Long-Lived
Many of the links below, and the template used for this charter, are for project scoping. Projects have limited, definite lifecycles - the project ends when the goal is accomplished, and the result is handed off to an operational team to run it.
This top-level team charter has an indefinite lifespan. It's meant to be revisited and revised (though it can also be replaced). The team charter helps us have a shared understanding of not just what we're making, but what we're maintaining and providing to our "customer" (even if we aren't necessarily selling our product/service).
External Resources
See https://dschool.sfo3.digitaloceanspaces.com/documents/Design-Project-Scoping-Guide_V7.pdf!
Also:
- https://www.pmi.org/learning/library/team-charter-development-5128
- https://www.atlassian.com/work-management/project-collaboration/team-charter
- https://dschool.stanford.edu/tools/design-project-scoping-guide
- https://ocw.mit.edu/courses/1-040-project-management-spring-2009/
- https://www.nasa.gov/reference/4-1-stakeholder-expectations-definition/