Countdown to CAST 2011
I am really excited to be heading to my fourth consecutive CAST conference next week! The Association for Software Testing is hosting the sixth annual Conference of the Association for Software Testing, CAST 2011, in Seattle, Washington on August 8th – 10th.
As noted on the AST website, “This year’s conference promises to be the most unique to date, it will be the first Context-Driven Testing conference to ever be held. This year’s program features some most outspoken context-driven testers in the world. This international gathering will span three days in August and offer attendees the opportunity to discuss, debate, question, and learn about Context-Driven Testing.” I am an advocate of the context-driven approach and am keen to see the direction some of the sessions take. I think the talk I am looking forward to the most is the tutorial Context-Driven Test Leadership by James Bach. This will be my first time seeing James present on the topic of leadership and I am looking forward to his perspective on many aspects.
As much as I am looking forward to the conference content, I am just as excited for the opportunity to reconnect with friends and meet new people passionate about software testing. The conference schedule includes a diverse group of international presenters, some of whom I have been looking forward to meeting for several years now.
I plan to tweet like crazy and hope to to crank out a couple of blog posts as I am going as an AST board member and attendee but I am not presenting. I am looking forward to focusing on attending some great sessions and participating in all of the facilitated and non-facilitated (hallway) “conferring” that makes CAST so unique.
I have noticed something interesting about the way we learn over the last year. I have singled out the past 12 months as I have had the opportunity to observe hundreds of people actively learning through the numerous conferences, workshops and training sessions that I have attended or presented. What I observed was fascinating to me. People seem prone to identify what they are learning to be in alignment with their current knowledge and experience even when in reality there are wildly contrasting differences.
This year I decided to tackle presenting the dangers inherit with metrics and measurements. The topic has been well covered in books, articles, and blogs and I was fortunate to have such great material to learn from. I am passionate about encouraging people to understand the many ways we can be deceived. 

In June of last year I blogged
I am excited to share the latest addition to the mnemonic listing on my Resources page. My colleague and friend Nancy Kelln recently posted
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