This paper presents the findings of, to the best of our knowledge, the first survey on software testing practices carried out in Australian ICT industry. A total of 65 organizations from various major capital cities in Australia participated in the survey, which was conducted between 2002 and 2003. The survey focused on five major aspects of software testing, namely testing methodologies and techniques, automated testing tools, software testing metrics, testing standards, and software testing training and education. Based on the survey results, current practices in software testing are reported, as well as some observations and recommendations for the future of software testing in Australia for industry and academia.
Currently, Equivalence Partitioning and Boundary Value Analysis are taught at La Trobe University using Myers' original representation of these black-box testing methods. We previously proposed an alternative representation called Atomic Rules. In this paper we present the statistical results of two similar experiments that examine which of these approaches enable students to write more complete and correct black-box test sets and which approach students prefer to use. We compare the results of these experiments and discuss how the results could change the teaching of black-box testing methods at La Trobe University and in industry.
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