An ART event is a meeting or ceremony that involves all the teams in an Agile Release Train (ART) and helps them align, collaborate, and deliver value. An example of an ART event is the Innovation and Planning (IP) Iteration, which is a two-week period at the end of each Program Increment (PI) that provides time for innovation, planning, and improvement activities. During the IP Iteration, teams can explore new ideas, work on technical debt, conduct hackathons, prepare for the next PI Planning, and conduct the Inspect and Adapt workshop. References: Agile Release Train, Scaled Agile: ART Events Overview, Innovation and Planning Iteration
Question 57
Which is an aspect of systems thinking?
Options:
A.
Mastery drives intrinsic motivation
B.
Optimizing a component does not optimize the system
C.
The length of the queue impacts the wait time
D.
Cadence makes routine everything that can be routine
Answer:
B
Explanation:
Explanation:
Systems thinking is a holistic approach to solution development, incorporating all aspects of a system and its environment into the design, development, deployment, and maintenance. It requires leaders and teams to understand the solution, the enterprise, and the value stream as a system. One of the principles of systems thinking is that optimizing a component of the system does not optimize the whole system. In fact, it may even harm the system performance, as it may create bottlenecks, conflicts, or waste in other parts of the system. Therefore, systems thinking encourages looking at the system as a whole and finding the best trade-offs and synergies among the components. References: Principle #2 - Apply systems thinking - Scaled Agile Framework, What ‘systems thinking’ actually means - and why it matters today | World Economic Forum, What is Systems Thinking? - Critical Thinking Secrets
Question 58
Which statement applies to uncommitted objectives?
Options:
A.
They are included in the commitment
B.
They are items the team has high confidence in
C.
They are counted when calculating load
D.
They are extra things teams can do if they have time
Answer:
D
Explanation:
Explanation:
Uncommitted objectives are used to identify work that can be variable within the scope of a PI. The work is planned, but the outcome is not certain. Teams can use uncommitted objectives whenever there is low confidence in meeting the objective. They are not included in the team’s commitment or counted against teams in the ART predictability measure. They are extra things teams can do if they have time and capacity, but they will not be penalized if not achieved. References: PI Objectives, What is an uncommitted objective in SAFe?, SAFe 5.0, PI Objectives - Easy Agile
Question 59
During which PI Planning activity do Business Owners assign business value to PI Objectives?
Options:
A.
The final plan review
B.
The team breakout session
C.
The Management Review and Problem-Solving workshop
D.
The draft plan review
Answer:
D
Explanation:
Explanation:
During the draft plan review, the teams present their draft PI objectives and plans to the other teams and the Business Owners. The Business Owners then assign a business value to each PI objective, based on the conversation with the team and the alignment with the vision and goals. The business value is a number between 1 (lowest) and 10 (highest) that reflects the relative importance and expected benefit of the objective. The business value is used to measure the ART’s predictability and performance at the end of the PI. References: PI Objectives, PI Planning, Your Guide to Writing Great Iteration and PI Objectives