Scholars have investigated numerous barriers to accessible software development tools and processes for Blind and Low Vision (BLV) developers. However, the research community has yet to study the accessibility of software development meetings, which are known to play a crucial role in software development practice. We conducted semi-structured interviews with 26 BLV software professionals about software development meeting accessibility. We found four key themes related to in-person and remote software development meetings: (1) participants observed that certain meeting activities and software tools used in meetings were inaccessible, (2) participants performed additional labor in order to make meetings accessible, (3) participants avoided disclosing their disability during meetings due to fear of career repercussions, (4) participants suggested technical, social and organizational solutions for accessible meetings, including developing their own solutions. We suggest recommendations and design implications for future accessible software development meetings including technical and policy-driven solutions.
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Exploring a Research Agenda for Design Knowledge Capture in Meetings
Meetings are a frequent part of life for a software developer. Software design is often performed, discussed, and reviewed in these meetings. This means that meetings may contain important design information that could be captured for later use. Meeting design tools may be a way to capture design information as a byproduct of discussion that arises in these meetings. In this paper, we identify a list of key meeting support tool features that could support the capture and retrieval of design information and compare these to features currently offered in commercial meeting support tools.
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- Award ID(s):
- 2210813
- PAR ID:
- 10427513
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- International Conference on the Cooperative and Human Aspects of Software Engineering
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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