155-1309/01 – Business Process Modeling (MPP)
Gurantor department | Department of Applied Informatics | Credits | 5 |
Subject guarantor | doc. Ing. František Huňka, CSc. | Subject version guarantor | doc. Ing. František Huňka, CSc. |
Study level | undergraduate or graduate | Requirement | Choice-compulsory |
Year | 2 | Semester | winter |
| | Study language | Czech |
Year of introduction | 2014/2015 | Year of cancellation | 2015/2016 |
Intended for the faculties | EKF | Intended for study types | Follow-up Master |
Subject aims expressed by acquired skills and competences
The aim of the course is to explain the theoretical foundation of business process modeling and elucidate the topic on the practical examples. The main stress is put on modeling utilizing activity diagrams notation, enterprise ontology notation and value modeling notation. During the course, students become familiar with the notion of business process, its correct identification and its utilization in practically oriented assignments with applying corresponding theory and methodology.
Teaching methods
Lectures
Tutorials
Summary
Compulsory literature:
Dietz, J.L.G. Enterprise Ontology Theory and Methodology. Springer 2006
Hruby, P. Model-Driven Development Using Business Patterns. Springer 2006
Recommended literature:
Dietz, J.L.G. The deep structure of business process. Commun. ACM, 49(5) pp. 58-64, 2006
Halphin, T., Morgan, T. Information Modeling and Relational Databases. Morgan Kaufman Publishers 2nd edt. USA 2008
Additional study materials
Way of continuous check of knowledge in the course of semester
E-learning
Other requirements
1. Active approach at the seminars and minimal attendance of 80%.
2. Ability to solve correctly assigned tasks in particular modeling notation.
3. Successful solution of the assignments for the credit.
Prerequisities
Subject has no prerequisities.
Co-requisities
Subject has no co-requisities.
Subject syllabus:
Outline of given lectures:
1. The notion of business process and the its notations.
2. Process organizing.
3. Key industrial enterprise processes and their modeling.
4. Enterprise engineering, enterprise ontology.
5. Business process - operational declaration - coordination, production.
6. Composition of transactions and business úprocess creation.
7. Composition of transaction and business process creation.
8. Human abilities of communication, coordination, production.
9. The notion of system, the notion of model.
10. The notion of fact, examples.
11. Examplifying of the methodology.
12. Value modeling - basic concepts and processes.
13. Value modeling - extended concepts.
14. Value modeling - examples.
Conditions for subject completion
Occurrence in study plans
Occurrence in special blocks
Assessment of instruction