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Understanding the career mobility of blind and low vision software professionals

Understanding the career mobility of blind and low vision software professionals
Understanding the career mobility of blind and low vision software professionals

Context: Scholars in the software engineering (SE) research community have investigated career advancement in the software industry. Research topics have included how individual and external factors can impact career mobility of software professionals, and how gender affects career advancement. However, the community has yet to look at career mobility from the lens of accessibility. Specifically, there is a pressing need to illuminate the factors that hinder the career mobility of blind and low vision software professionals (BLVSPs). Objective: This study aims to understand aspects of the workplace that impact career mobility for BLVSPs. Methods: We interviewed 26 BLVSPs with different roles, years of experience, and industry sectors. Thematic analysis was used to identify common factors related to career mobility. Results: We found four factors that impacted the career mobility of BLVSPs: (1) technical challenges, (2) colleagues' perceptions of BLVSPs, (3) BLVSPs' own perceptions on managerial progression, and (4) BLVSPs' investment in accessibility at the workplace. Conclusion: We suggest implications for tool designers, organizations, and researchers towards fostering more accessible workplaces to support the career mobility of BLVSPs.

accessibility, blind and low vision software professionals, career mobility, meetings, software engineers, workplace accessibility
170-181
Association for Computing Machinery
Cha, Yoonha
51d42c5f-2020-4dc1-bf56-d9dde2ac9ee9
Jackson, Victoria
28beab06-6fae-46d3-ad73-1d29897680db
Figueira, Isabela
857a1421-f587-4169-8ec3-129db360a28e
Branham, Stacy Marie
79c305e0-6d9e-481a-979f-0a10e78f7bd1
Van Der Hoek, André
4c4cdeed-2314-47ad-ab7f-ae14026a028c
Cha, Yoonha
51d42c5f-2020-4dc1-bf56-d9dde2ac9ee9
Jackson, Victoria
28beab06-6fae-46d3-ad73-1d29897680db
Figueira, Isabela
857a1421-f587-4169-8ec3-129db360a28e
Branham, Stacy Marie
79c305e0-6d9e-481a-979f-0a10e78f7bd1
Van Der Hoek, André
4c4cdeed-2314-47ad-ab7f-ae14026a028c

Cha, Yoonha, Jackson, Victoria, Figueira, Isabela, Branham, Stacy Marie and Van Der Hoek, André (2024) Understanding the career mobility of blind and low vision software professionals. In Proceedings - 2024 IEEE/ACM 17th International Conference on Cooperative and Human Aspects of Software Engineering, CHASE 2024. Association for Computing Machinery. pp. 170-181 . (doi:10.1145/3641822.3641872).

Record type: Conference or Workshop Item (Paper)

Abstract

Context: Scholars in the software engineering (SE) research community have investigated career advancement in the software industry. Research topics have included how individual and external factors can impact career mobility of software professionals, and how gender affects career advancement. However, the community has yet to look at career mobility from the lens of accessibility. Specifically, there is a pressing need to illuminate the factors that hinder the career mobility of blind and low vision software professionals (BLVSPs). Objective: This study aims to understand aspects of the workplace that impact career mobility for BLVSPs. Methods: We interviewed 26 BLVSPs with different roles, years of experience, and industry sectors. Thematic analysis was used to identify common factors related to career mobility. Results: We found four factors that impacted the career mobility of BLVSPs: (1) technical challenges, (2) colleagues' perceptions of BLVSPs, (3) BLVSPs' own perceptions on managerial progression, and (4) BLVSPs' investment in accessibility at the workplace. Conclusion: We suggest implications for tool designers, organizations, and researchers towards fostering more accessible workplaces to support the career mobility of BLVSPs.

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More information

Published date: 12 June 2024
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © 2024 Copyright held by the owner/author(s).
Venue - Dates: 17th IEEE/ACM International Conference on Cooperative and Human Aspects of Software Engineering, CHASE 2024 co-located with the International Conference on Software Engineering, ICSE 2024, , Lisbon, Portugal, 2024-04-14 - 2024-04-15
Keywords: accessibility, blind and low vision software professionals, career mobility, meetings, software engineers, workplace accessibility

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 506906
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/506906
PURE UUID: c2e555bc-327d-4640-91af-45c201d1f2d2
ORCID for Victoria Jackson: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6326-931X

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 19 Nov 2025 17:53
Last modified: 20 Nov 2025 03:13

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Contributors

Author: Yoonha Cha
Author: Victoria Jackson ORCID iD
Author: Isabela Figueira
Author: Stacy Marie Branham
Author: André Van Der Hoek

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