Case Study Assignment - Part 3 (Individual Report and Presentation) [Report is due on Friday, 3 November 2017, 11:55pm, and Presentation is due during your tutorial in week 13] This is the third and...

Can you get it done by saturday


Case Study Assignment - Part 3 (Individual Report and Presentation) [Report is due on Friday, 3 November 2017, 11:55pm, and Presentation is due during your tutorial in week 13] This is the third and final Part of your case study assignment and this is an individual assignment. This assignment does not require you to include Part 1 or Part 2 of the assignment. However, it is recommended that you include both Part 1 and Part 2 with amendments as annexures if you think this will help to make more sense of Part 3 of the assignment. This Part 3 of the assignment includes the following sections:   1. Develop Use Case Diagrams for the new system Think about core stakeholders and/or sub-systems in identifying core features of your system. Core stakeholders might well be presenting core events that represent the essence of your system. Think about other models that you have developed which reflect the essential or core purpose/s of the system. Your Use Cases and Use Case Diagrams should match those models. You can have several use case diagrams (typically from 2 - 4) for each assignment case. 2. Specify Use Case Descriptions for some (minimum of two) important Use Cases You should follow the template from your lecture notes / textbook to describe each use case. Sea level detail is recommended. 3. Develop the Class Diagram for your system This is an essential diagram regardless of any methodology used in an organisation. Don’t forget to cross check the Class Diagram with other relevant models in this assignment for consistency. 4. Develop an Activity Diagram (AD) for one Use Case in your system Don’t forget to think about the models with which the AD should match.   5. Develop a sequence diagram (SD) for one Use Case in your system Don’t forget to think about the models with which the SD should match.   6. Develop a State Machine Diagram (SMD) for a Class in your system You should select an important class, and make sure that you draw SMD for one class only. Also, think about what other models the SMD should be consistent with. 7. Quality Assurance Statement Quality Assurance statement is where you describe the qualifying activities you perform to ensure that your assignment presents models that match each other and offer a cohesive picture of the case study analysis. You need to describe the steps you have taken to ensure that all models matched and added to the story.  8. References Make sure you cite and reference any sources you use. You should be using several sources for this assignment. Additional Notes Research The Internet and your library are useful sources of information. But be selective when you do research on the Internet and look for credible sources. Ask questions, such as do the articles match lecture materials? If not, why? Your research shouldn’t normally contradict lecture materials. Size This assignment (Part 3) is smaller than Part 2 but it will take a significant amount of time because it is an individual assignment. So, start early and if there any extra time left, you should wisely spend that time in preparing for the final examination. Bear in mind that you should start preparing for the final exam earlier rather than later to avoid very disappointing grade in this unit. Exam is going to be difficult, and it will be more difficult to do well in the exam compared to assignments. Submission You must submit your report and presentation slides before the due date in Moodle. Note on Presentation Every student should upload his/her presentation slides in the Dropbox with the report. Each student will get strictly 4 minutes to present a randomly selected model by the tutor before the presentation.   Marking Guide A separate marking guide will be published in Moodle in due course. Case 4: GlobalAid GlobalAid Australia (GAA) is an international relief and development agency working to support and assist the world’s poorest and most needy communities. It supports projects in over 20 countries spanning Africa, Asia, and Europe. By responding quickly to emergencies, GAA provides relief to survivors of natural disasters and human-caused disasters (war, civil-strife, displacement). GAA also undertakes long-term development projects on education and training, provision of clean water and healthcare, and re-establishing livelihoods to break cycles of endemic poverty. GAA is a signatory of the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent (IFRCRC) Code of Conduct of Non-Governmental Organisations (NGO) in Disaster Relief, and supports the UN Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). It is also registered by the Australian Taxation Office with DGR status for tax deductible donations. Through their work, they hope to foster peace and sustainable development solutions for the poor in impoverished communities. GAA’s donation collection is a complicated process. Donors can donate online and they can choose from a range of donation type, programs and projects in different regions around the globe for their donations. Donations can be made one-off, monthly or yearly. GAA’s program includes emergency relief, food aid, orphan aid, water, health, education, shelter, sustainable development and bequest in will. For each program type, there can be several current projects. Some example current projects in emergency relief include Fiji cyclone appeal, Ethiopian crisis appeal and Syrian emergency appeal. After choosing the purpose of donation, the donor can specify the donation amount or choose from a set of pre-specified amounts, namely 10 dollars, 20 dollars, 50 dollars, 100 dollars and 1000 dollars. They can also choose to give 5% administration fee and 2.5% merchant fee, but this is optional. However, some payment cards will incur compulsory merchant fee of 2.5% which goes to the card authority. Donors can donate either as anonymous or registered donors. If the donor is already registered they can log in and then proceed to payment process. Otherwise, the system will prompt for relevant personal details to process the registration. Payment details will include payment type, name on card, card number, expiry date and card verification value (CVV). Donor registration process will include provision of information on donor’s title, first name, last name, email, secondary email (if any), password, confirm password, home phone, mobile phone, preferred contact and address. Registered donors can also choose to express interest to become volunteers, subscribe to email newsletters and receive postal mail. All credit card payments are powered by Ezidebit and all direct debits are powered by POLi – a business of Australia Post. POLi enables customers to pay via their internet banking and their software populates the payment details and tells the customer as soon as the payment is complete. GAA is determined to provide a cutting edge payment platform to donors and reach out to as many donors as possible in a competitive environment. Programs and projects are regularly updated online to inform potential donors. GAA is also motivated to use emerging technologies, such as cloud solutions, mobile apps, social media and business analytics in line with their strategies to maintain trust, efficiency and accountability. GAA management also wants the new system to use emerging technologies, such as mobile devices, cloud computing, big data and social networks for decision making, marketing, securing funds and for various business process improvement initiatives as well as to provide quality services to various stakeholders of GAA.
May 03, 2020
SOLUTION.PDF

Get Answer To This Question

Related Questions & Answers

More Questions »

Submit New Assignment

Copy and Paste Your Assignment Here