Computer scientist with background in chemistry and physics, now working as a java developer. Often knowing about "that thing" and having forgotten the word.
I would say it is more about being on top or bottom of the hierarchy. White man are often overrepresented at the top, but you still have the phenome in all-white-men-groups and groups without without white men.
So being able to be a great software developer depends on being acceptable as a great software developer.
On the other hand, I think this is an important part of growing great and it needs others to live that principle as well. You can't grow when you are not allowed to have a strong opinion and you can't grow when none is allowed to challenge your strong opinions with their strong opinion.
Definitely an issue. As a white guy, I think one of the more valuable skills I learned is to shut up (On occasion, I'm still working on it). Some of my peers have it the other way, their most valuable skill was learning to speak up. Strongly voiced, loosely held opinions can be great for discussing technical approaches if there's trust on a team. But if the discussion is less technical, or the trust is broken, you can start getting issues where other people (often those who have firsthand experience to speaking up being met with hostility) feel attacked or ignored.
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I would say it is more about being on top or bottom of the hierarchy. White man are often overrepresented at the top, but you still have the phenome in all-white-men-groups and groups without without white men.
So being able to be a great software developer depends on being acceptable as a great software developer.
On the other hand, I think this is an important part of growing great and it needs others to live that principle as well. You can't grow when you are not allowed to have a strong opinion and you can't grow when none is allowed to challenge your strong opinions with their strong opinion.
Definitely an issue. As a white guy, I think one of the more valuable skills I learned is to shut up (On occasion, I'm still working on it). Some of my peers have it the other way, their most valuable skill was learning to speak up. Strongly voiced, loosely held opinions can be great for discussing technical approaches if there's trust on a team. But if the discussion is less technical, or the trust is broken, you can start getting issues where other people (often those who have firsthand experience to speaking up being met with hostility) feel attacked or ignored.