Select the search type
  • Site
  • Web
Search

Path Steps

Follow these steps in order. Each one links to an EasyDNNnews article/video and gives you a quick, practical takeaway.

You’ll learn how to frame AI as a teammate that supports Scrum events and backlog work without replacing judgment or collaboration.
Do this exercise: Write a 3-sentence “AI usage policy” for your team (what you will use AI for, what you won’t, and what must be reviewed by a human).
You’ll learn repeatable prompt patterns to generate stories with clearer intent, constraints, and acceptance criteria.
Do this exercise: Take one messy request and prompt AI to produce (a) a user story, (b) 5 acceptance criteria, and (c) 3 key questions for the PO.
You’ll learn how to generate “plan options” (not commitments) and improve shared understanding of scope and dependencies.
Do this exercise: Ask AI for 2 sprint goal options based on your top backlog items, then pick one as a team and adjust wording together.
You’ll learn facilitation prompts that help teams extract insights, turn feedback into actions, and avoid “retro theatre.”
Do this exercise: Feed AI 5 bullet facts from the sprint and ask for (a) patterns, (b) 3 improvement experiments, and (c) 1 metric per experiment.
You’ll learn how to convert your best prompts and practices into a lightweight working agreement the team can actually follow.
Do this exercise: Create a “Prompt Library” page with 5 prompts: refinement, story writing, planning, review, retro—each with input/output examples.
 

Learning Path - Free

24 Feb 2026

Step 1: What AI Can (and Can’t) Do for Scrum Teams

AI is a productivity amplifier—not a Product Owner, not a Scrum Master, and not a Developer.

Used correctly, it accelerates learning, drafting, summarizing, and exploring options. Used poorly, it replaces thinking with automation theater.

This step helps your team position AI as a supporting teammate, not a decision-maker.

Author: Rod Claar
0 Comments
Article rating: No rating

24 Feb 2026

Step 2: Prompts That Produce Better User Stories

AI can help—but only if the prompt is structured.

This step introduces repeatable prompt patterns that improve:

  • Intent clarity

  • Constraints visibility

  • Acceptance criteria quality

  • PO alignment

Author: Rod Claar
0 Comments
Article rating: No rating

24 Feb 2026

Step 3: Backlog Refinement with AI (Without Losing the “Why”)

The Core Risk

When teams use AI in refinement, a common failure mode appears:

  • Stories get cleaner

  • Acceptance criteria get longer

  • Technical detail increases

  • Business intent becomes less visible

Scrum optimizes for value delivery, not documentation density.

AI must support the “why” behind the work.

Author: Rod Claar
0 Comments
Article rating: No rating

24 Feb 2026

Step 4: Sprint Planning Acceleration

The Key Principle

AI should propose:

  • Possible Sprint Goals

  • Possible scope groupings

  • Possible dependency flags

The team still decides:

  • What to commit to

  • What fits capacity

  • What aligns to product strategy

AI drafts.
The team commits.

Author: Rod Claar
0 Comments
Article rating: No rating
RSS

Learning Path - Member

 
 
✓ Featured Content

AI for Scrum and Agile Teams
Videos

A curated playlist of specific YouTube content.

Search Results

24 Feb 2026

Step 5: AI for Developers — Tests, Code Review, and Quality

Author: Rod Claar  /  Categories: AI Learning Path Members  /  Rate this article:
No rating

1. Generating Test Ideas (Not Just Test Code)

AI performs well at expanding scenario coverage.

Use prompts like:

Given this user story and acceptance criteria, generate:
• Positive test scenarios
• Negative test scenarios
• Edge cases
• Boundary conditions

This often surfaces:

  • Input validation gaps

  • Permission model issues

  • Data edge conditions

  • Failure-state scenarios

However, AI does not understand your architecture, test framework, or business nuances.
Treat output as a checklist candidate, not a final artifact.


2. Identifying Edge Cases

AI is particularly effective at pattern-based risk expansion.

Prompt example:

Analyze this logic and list potential edge cases, concurrency risks, and failure modes.

It may identify:

  • Null-handling gaps

  • Race conditions

  • Overflow conditions

  • Integration assumptions

You still validate feasibility and relevance.


3. Improving Readability and Maintainability

AI can assist in:

  • Refactoring suggestions

  • Naming improvements

  • Reducing cyclomatic complexity

  • Extracting pure functions

Prompt example:

Suggest refactoring improvements to improve readability and testability without changing behavior.

Review changes line by line.
Never apply refactors wholesale without inspection.


4. Code Review Assistance

AI can augment—not replace—peer review.

Useful prompts:

Identify potential bugs, security concerns, and maintainability issues in this code.

Evaluate whether this implementation aligns with the acceptance criteria.

AI can flag:

  • Missing validation

  • Security vulnerabilities

  • Performance inefficiencies

  • Inconsistent patterns

But it does not replace contextual architectural judgment.


Guardrails for Safe Use

Adopt explicit safety rules:

  • Do not merge unreviewed AI-generated code.

  • Do not assume AI-generated tests are complete.

  • Do not bypass peer review because “AI already checked it.”

  • Require human validation for all generated logic.

If the output is correct but poorly understood, it is still a risk.


Expected Outcome

After this step, developers should:

  • Generate broader test coverage

  • Surface more edge cases earlier

  • Improve code readability

  • Strengthen review rigor

Quality remains a human responsibility.

AI accelerates analysis.
It does not own correctness.

Print

Number of views (91)      Comments (0)

Tags:

Search

Calendar

«March 2026»
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
22232425262728
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
2930311234

Upcoming events

Upcoming AI Training

20 May 2026

Author: Rod Claar
0 Comments
Article rating: No rating

2 Apr 2026

Author: Rod Claar
0 Comments
Article rating: No rating
RSS

Two Ways

Keep Learning — Two Ways

Choose the free track to get new lessons as they’re released, or go deeper with a structured course that puts everything into a repeatable playbook.

Free
Join updates / get new lessons

Get notified when new steps, templates, and examples are added—so you can keep improving your AI skills one sprint at a time.

Join updates
No spam. Practical lessons only. Unsubscribe any time.