I just finished looking through the 2019 Developer Survey and I was disturbed by how much of the focus was on gender. Up front are 11 questions in the demographics section with gender as a focus or stratification option, and several more in the other sections. The take homes:
- Women suffer from feelings of inferiority (Feelings of Competence By Gender)
- Women don't feel as welcome on here (Do Developers Consider Themselves Part of the Stack Overflow Community?)
- Women have more feelings overall (Developers' Perspectives By Gender)
I know you are getting these answers from the surveys, but I am quite surprised at the narrative that is being implicitly built off those answers.
Personal Anecdote:
As a professional female developer, my biggest gender-related challenge at work is being taken seriously. It's not even a big problem since I work with awesome people and my work is appreciated. But it does come up, most often with the topic of how I express work-appropriate emotions such as frustration, irritation, and anger. I don't express them in the same way my male colleagues do and so sometimes it makes my co-workers uncomfortable and they act weird.
This reaction itself can be irritating. However, I figure I'm teaching them how to work with someone different than themselves, and I know it's not my problem if they don't like how my face looks when I'm frustrated. They can deal with it.
How this relates to the survey:
I think this survey could help reinforce the problem I've just described. My impression while reading it was that, once again, women are the "other". This survey and its takeaways re-highlight what tender little flowers we are that get our feelings hurt all the time. This isn't true. The whole problem is that people communicate differently and that one type of communication has been prioritized in programming for a long time.
The only question that got close to this problem was "Developers' Perspectives By Gender" and yet the word choices used came across as somewhat immature, suggesting younger or newer users. To me, it is immature (in its strictest definition - someone who hasn't had a lot of life experience yet) to assume rudeness of someone where directness was intended. Again this goes both ways - the way I express frustration about code not working is also not an indication of mental instability or weakness.
My actual question:
What, if anything, has SO done to reach out to professional female developers with experience? I would be interested to know what other women who use the site, and have 5+ years in the industry, think would be helpful towards this site's clear aim to be more welcoming to women. I don't need it to be any different - but someone, somewhere, obviously thinks there is a problem. If SO is going to try to "fix" this problem I would prefer they do it in such a way that doesn't push a really unhelpful narrative.
Shog9
says, which is something. And helpful to know.