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South Africa

  1. Education and academic field
  2. Professional developer
  3. How time is spent
  4. Previous employment
  5. Collaboration and training
  6. Publications and citations
  7. Open source and DOI
  8. Good practices
  9. Tools and programming languages
  10. Job satisfaction
  11. Research software engineer

Education and academic field

This section contains the information about the type of education the participants have, as well as their highest degree obtained.

We asked the participants, in which field they are working. With that question, it is possible to see which current field employed the most of RSE/RSD. The questions was specific to each country and was multiple choice. Each participant could choose several fields. We then calculate the different proportion by dividing each field by the total of participants that have selected at least one option.

Questions in this section

  • What is the highest level of education you have attained? (one choice list)
  • In which discipline is your highest academic qualification? (one choice list)
  • Which professional qualification do you hold? (free text)

Levels of education

Highest level of education for South Africa Count Percentage Percentage in 2017 Difference with previous year
Doctorate 7 30.4348 73.6842 -43.2494
Master degree 6 26.087 15.7895 10.2975
Undergraduate degree 6 26.087 nan nan
Further Education (NVQ A-Level, …) 2 8.69565 nan nan
Other 2 8.69565 nan nan

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2021-08-04T21:03:42.708623 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.4.2, https://matplotlib.org/ 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 Other Further Education (NVQ A-Level, ...) Undergraduate degree Master degree Doctorate 9% 9% 26% 26% 30% Highest level of education, South Africa −25 0 Δ

Academic field for education and professional development

Alongside of question about education level we also asked the participants in which field they finished their highest level of education. Here again the propositions were specific to each countries so the comparison is difficult despite lot of overlapping in the categories.

Field of education for South Africa Count Percentage Percentage in 2017 Difference with previous year
Computer Science 10 45.4545 5.26316 40.1914
Biological Sciences 4 18.1818 nan nan
Mathematics 3 13.6364 nan nan
Physics and Astronomy 1 4.54545 63.1579 -58.6124
Business & Management Studies 1 4.54545 nan nan
Economics 1 4.54545 5.26316 -0.717703
Communication & Media Studies 1 4.54545 nan nan
Psychology 1 4.54545 nan nan

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2021-08-04T21:03:53.933963 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.4.2, https://matplotlib.org/ 0 10 20 30 40 Psychology Communication & Media Studies Economics Business & Management Studies Physics and Astronomy Mathematics Biological Sciences Computer Science 5% 5% 5% 5% 5% 14% 18% 45% Field of education, South Africa −50 0 Δ 2021-08-04T21:03:55.192950 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.4.2, https://matplotlib.org/ Professional qualification, South Africa

Academic field of work

field of work for South Africa Count Percentage Percentage in 2017 Difference with previous year
Computer Science 12 52.1739 26.3158 25.8581
Biological Sciences 10 43.4783 nan nan
Education 4 17.3913 10.5263 6.86499
Physics and Astronomy 4 17.3913 63.1579 -45.7666
Electrical & Electronic Engineering 2 8.69565 5.26316 3.43249
Mathematics 2 8.69565 21.0526 -12.357
Communication & Media Studies 1 4.34783 5.26316 -0.915332
Economics 1 4.34783 nan nan
Librarianship & Information Management 1 4.34783 nan nan
Linguistics 1 4.34783 5.26316 -0.915332
Psychology 1 4.34783 nan nan

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2021-08-04T21:04:09.879739 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.4.2, https://matplotlib.org/ 0 10 20 30 40 50 Psychology Linguistics Librarianship & Information Management Economics Communication & Media Studies Mathematics Electrical & Electronic Engineering Physics and Astronomy Education Biological Sciences Computer Science 4% 4% 4% 4% 4% 9% 9% 17% 17% 43% 52% field of work, South Africa −25 0 25 Δ

Professional developer

In this section we investigate the relationship between RSEs/RSDs and their own experience in software development Understandably, we expect them having several years of software development experience. However, as shown in previous years, it is not necessarily reflected upon their own feeling of being considered as professional.

Questions in this section:

  • Do you consider yourself a professional software developer? (Yes/No)
  • How many years of software development experience do you have? (integer)

How many professional developers?

Professional developer for South Africa Count Percentage Percentage in 2017 Difference with previous year
Yes 6 28.5714 26.3158 2.25564
No 15 71.4286 73.6842 -2.25564

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2021-08-04T21:05:08.625779 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.4.2, https://matplotlib.org/ 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 No Yes 71% 29% Professional developer, South Africa −2 0 2 Δ

Years of software development experience

How many years of software development experience for South Africa (without 95 percentile) Results in 2018 Results in 2017
count 21 18
mean 7.28571 15.3889
std 5.39577 11.7079
min 0 2
25% 4 5.5
50% 5 13.5
75% 10 21.5
max 20 40

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2021-08-04T21:05:09.301285 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.4.2, https://matplotlib.org/ 2017 2018 Year 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 Value 0 10 20 30 40 Value 0 2 4 6 8 10 Count Year 2017 2018 How many years of software development experience for South Africa (without 95 percentile)

How time is spent

RSE/RSE are supposed to be an hybrid role, compared to pure software developer. They bring a knowledge from their field but also are developing software. To capture this different tasks they may do during their work, we asked them how they spend their time but also how they wish to spend their time to investigate any difference between what they do and what they want to do.

How to read the plots

Respondents were asked how much time is spent in a particular activity using a Likert scale from from 1 (None at all) to 10 (All my time).

The same questions asked them how much time they wanted to spend on these activities. With that it was possible to see if discrepancies exist between what they actually do and what they want to do.

To read the results, when the bars shift to the right (in blue), it means they reported positive values (from 6 to 10); when the bars are on the left (in red), it means they reported more negative values (relative to the scale). Each bar has a number that represents the percentage of participants that selected that value. The total bar represents 100%.

To calculate the difference between what they want and what they do, we subtract the answers to the the time that they wished to have spent from the the answer to actual time spent. It is therefore possible to understand the results as:

  1. The result is zero: The time spent matches, they do as much as they want.
  2. The result is negative: They wish to spend less time to do that activity
  3. The result is positive: They wish to spend more time to do that activity

Questions in this section

All questions were asked on a 1 to 10 Likert scale.

  • On average, how much of your time is spent developing software?
  • On average, how much of your time is spent on research?
  • On average, how much of your time is spent on management?
  • On average, how much of your time is spent on teaching?
  • On average, how much of your time is spent on other activities?
2021-08-04T21:03:33.331892 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.4.2, https://matplotlib.org/ Percentage Developing software Research Management Teaching Other activities 13 22 26 13 9 22 17 30 13 13 26 13 26 9 13 13 26 13 26 13 17 9 9 9 9 17 13 9 Time spent 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Percentage Developing software Research Management Teaching Other activities 17 41 22 9 9 36 13 39 9 9 17 13 9 9 17 17 13 9 17 13 9 9 17 9 9 9 30 13 13 Time wish to spent 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 Percentage Developing software Research Management Teaching Other activities 18 9 27 9 13 26 39 32 48 52 30 17 9 13 17 13 9 9 9 Difference between time spent and wish -8.0 -5.0 -4.0 -3.0 -2.0 -1.0 0.0 1.0 2.0 3.0 4.0 5.0 6.0 South Africa: Difference between time wish to spent and actually spent for each type of activity

Previous employment

Several questions were about the participants’ previous job. The idea is to collect insights of their career path and understand what their motivations are to be an RSE.

We also asked the participants to rank the reasons why they chose their actual position among 8 different ones:

  • Desire to work in a research environment
  • Freedom to choose own working practices
  • Desire to advance research
  • I want to learn new skills
  • Opportunity to develop software
  • Flexible working hours
  • Ability to work across disciplines
  • Opportunity for career advancement
  • The salary

Questions in this section

  • Where was your previous job based? (single choice)
  • What were the reasons to choose the current job? (ranking)

Where the previous job was based

Where the previous job was based for South Africa Count Percentage Percentage in 2017 Difference with previous year
University 13 61.9048 57.8947 4.01003
National laboratory 3 14.2857 nan nan
Non-profit organization 2 9.52381 nan nan
Other 1 4.7619 nan nan
Government 1 4.7619 nan nan
Private company 1 4.7619 nan nan

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2021-08-04T21:05:22.370142 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.4.2, https://matplotlib.org/ 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 Private company Government Other Non-profit organization National laboratory University 5% 5% 5% 10% 14% 62% Where the previous job was based, South Africa 0.0 2.5 Δ

What were the reasons to choose the current job

Reasons to choose current job Rank 1 Rank 2 Rank 3 Rank 4 Rank 5 Rank 6 Rank 7 Rank 8
Desire to work in a research environment 26.087 8.69565 17.3913 13.0435 nan nan nan nan
Freedom to choose own working practices 17.3913 8.69565 8.69565 4.34783 4.34783 nan nan nan
Desire to advance research 13.0435 17.3913 30.4348 8.69565 8.69565 nan nan nan
I want to learn new skills 13.0435 8.69565 8.69565 8.69565 17.3913 nan nan nan
Flexible working hours 8.69565 17.3913 4.34783 8.69565 13.0435 nan nan nan
Opportunity for career advancement 8.69565 8.69565 8.69565 13.0435 17.3913 nan nan nan
The salary 8.69565 13.0435 8.69565 4.34783 8.69565 nan nan nan
Opportunity to develop software 4.34783 4.34783 13.0435 8.69565 8.69565 nan nan nan
Ability to work across disciplines nan 13.0435 nan 30.4348 21.7391 nan nan nan

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2021-08-04T21:05:23.053273 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.4.2, https://matplotlib.org/ 0 20 40 60 80 100 Ranking of importance Rank 1 Rank 2 Rank 3 Rank 4 Rank 5 Percentage 26 9 17 13 17 9 9 13 17 30 9 9 13 9 9 9 17 9 17 9 13 9 9 9 13 17 9 13 9 9 13 9 9 13 30 22 Reasons to choose current job: South Africa Desire to work in a research environment Freedom to choose own working practices Desire to advance research I want to learn new skills Flexible working hours Opportunity for career advancement The salary Opportunity to develop software Ability to work across disciplines

Collaboration and training

Questions in this section:

  • Who uses the code that you write? (one choice)
  • Do you always work with the same researchers, or do you regularly change the researchers you work with? (one choice)
  • Are you part of a dedicated research software group within your institution? (yes-no)
  • How many software projects are you currently involved in? (numeric)
  • How many software developers typically work on your projects? (numeric)
  • On average, how many times a year do you take part in providing training? (numeric)
  • What training programs are you involved with (comma separated list, e.g., Software Carpentry, local university training, etc.)? (free text)

Developing code for others

developing code for others for South Africa Count Percentage Percentage in 2017 Difference with previous year
0 - Mostly me 3 13.0435 15.7895 -2.746
1 4 17.3913 26.3158 -8.92449
2 4 17.3913 21.0526 -3.66133
3 6 26.087 21.0526 5.03432
4 1 4.34783 5.26316 -0.915332
5 - Mostly other people 5 21.7391 10.5263 11.2128

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2021-08-04T21:02:44.502935 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.4.2, https://matplotlib.org/ 0 5 10 15 20 25 5 - Mostly other people 4 3 2 1 0 - Mostly me 22% 4% 26% 17% 17% 13% developing code for others, South Africa 0 10 Δ

Working with same researchers

Working with same researchers for South Africa Count Percentage Percentage in 2017 Difference with previous year
Different researchers, same research group 3 14.2857 nan nan
Regularly change researcher(s) 9 42.8571 43.75 -0.892857
Same researcher(s) 9 42.8571 56.25 -13.3929

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2021-08-04T21:02:44.848638 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.4.2, https://matplotlib.org/ 0 10 20 30 40 Same researcher(s) Regularly change researcher(s) Different researchers, same research group 43% 43% 14% Working with same researchers, South Africa −10 0 Δ

Part of dedicated group

member of a dedicated group for South Africa Count Percentage Percentage in 2017 Difference with previous year
No 12 57.1429 81.25 -24.1071
Yes 9 42.8571 18.75 24.1071

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2021-08-04T21:02:45.124098 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.4.2, https://matplotlib.org/ 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 Yes No 43% 57% member of a dedicated group, South Africa −25 0 25 Δ

Number of projects

Number of software projects for South Africa Count Percentage Percentage in 2017 Difference with previous year
0 3 15 nan nan
1 2 10 13.3333 -3.33333
2 2 10 26.6667 -16.6667
3 8 40 20 20
4 1 5 13.3333 -8.33333
5 1 5 13.3333 -8.33333
6 1 5 nan nan
8 1 5 6.66667 -1.66667
11 1 5 nan nan

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2021-08-04T21:02:45.554944 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.4.2, https://matplotlib.org/ 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 11.0 8.0 6.0 5.0 4.0 3.0 2.0 1.0 0.0 5% 5% 5% 5% 5% 40% 10% 10% 15% Number of software projects, South Africa 0 20 Δ
Number of software developers per projects for South Africa Count Percentage
0 2 11.1111
1 5 27.7778
2 5 27.7778
3 3 16.6667
4 2 11.1111
8 1 5.55556

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2021-08-04T21:02:45.918084 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.4.2, https://matplotlib.org/ 0 5 10 15 20 25 8.0 4.0 3.0 2.0 1.0 0.0 Number of software developers per projects, South Africa

Training

Number of time per year providing training for South Africa (without 95 percentile) Results in 2018 Results in 2017
count 19 7
mean 2.07895 1.76143
std 1.51165 0.855422
min 0 0.33
25% 1 1.5
50% 2 2
75% 3 2
max 5 3

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2021-08-04T21:02:46.609662 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.4.2, https://matplotlib.org/ 2017 2018 Year 0 1 2 3 4 5 Value 0 1 2 3 4 5 Value 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Count Year 2017 2018 Number of time per year providing training for South Africa (without 95 percentile) 2021-08-04T21:02:47.833674 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.4.2, https://matplotlib.org/ Number of time per year providing training, South Africa

Publications and citations

RSEs is an hybrid role between a researcher and a software developer. We investigated both of these aspects concerning publication and dissemination of their work, one on the traditional aspect of it (publications and conference).

One essential aspect of career in academia is the publications and the conferences to gain recognition. However, the role of RSE being less about writing articles than creating the infrastructure and the software for the article to exist, there is some fear that they will fail to have recognition through the papers and conferences.

Questions in the section:

  • In general, when your software contributes to a paper, are you acknowledged in that paper? (one choice)
  • Have you presented your software work at a conference or workshop? (yes-no)
  • At which conference(s)/workshop(s) have you presented your software work? (free text)

Acknowledgment in paper

Acknowledgment in paper for South Africa Count Percentage
Not mentioned at all 5 23.8095
Acknowledged in the main text 1 4.7619
Acknowledged in acknowledgements section 4 19.0476
Named as co-author 10 47.619
Named as main author 1 4.7619

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2021-08-04T21:03:12.765143 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.4.2, https://matplotlib.org/ 0 10 20 30 40 50 Named as main author Named as co-author Acknowledged in acknowledgements section Acknowledged in the main text Not mentioned at all Acknowledgment in paper, South Africa

Participation in conferences

Did you participate in conference for South Africa Count Percentage Percentage in 2017 Difference with previous year
Yes 12 60 31.25 28.75
No 8 40 68.75 -28.75

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2021-08-04T21:03:13.117781 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.4.2, https://matplotlib.org/ 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 No Yes 40% 60% Did you participate in conference, South Africa −25 0 25 Δ

Conference name

2021-08-04T21:03:14.238094 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.4.2, https://matplotlib.org/ Did you participate in conference, South Africa

Open source and DOI

RSEs is an hybrid role between a researcher and a software developer. We investigated both of these aspects concerning publication and dissemination of their work, one on the traditional aspect of it (publications and conference) and, as developed here, on the more software aspect (open source and DOI).

We asked the participants if they have ever released their work under open source licence but also questions about the referencing system. We asked them how often they reference software, and if they use DOI for it, and which tools for it.

We also asked them if they have an ORCID ID, a system that gives a unique reference ID for the researcher.

Questions in this section:

  • How often do you use an open-source licence for your software? (likert scale)
  • How often do you reference software directly or the papers describing the software? (likert scale)
  • How often do you associate your software with a Digital Object Identifier (DOI)? (likert scale)
  • Which tools do you use to mint a DOI (e.g. local library, Zenodo)? (free text)
  • Do you have an ORCID ID? (yes-no)

Open source use

Open source use for South Africa Count Percentage
1 (None at all) nan nan
2 1 4.7619
3 nan nan
4 nan nan
5 2 9.52381
6 nan nan
7 nan nan
8 2 9.52381
9 1 4.7619
10 (All the time) 13 61.9048

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2021-08-04T21:02:04.794759 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.4.2, https://matplotlib.org/ 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 10 (All the time) 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 (None at all) Open source use, South Africa

Referencing software

Citation of software for South Africa Count Percentage
1 (None at all) nan nan
2 nan nan
3 nan nan
4 nan nan
5 4 19.0476
6 nan nan
7 1 4.7619
8 5 23.8095
9 2 9.52381
10 (All the time) 4 19.0476

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2021-08-04T21:02:06.332592 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.4.2, https://matplotlib.org/ 0 5 10 15 20 25 10 (All the time) 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 (None at all) Citation of software, South Africa

Use of Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

Use of Digital Object Identifier for South Africa Count Percentage
1 (None at all) nan nan
2 nan nan
3 1 4.7619
4 nan nan
5 1 4.7619
6 nan nan
7 3 14.2857
8 nan nan
9 1 4.7619
10 (All the time) nan nan

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2021-08-04T21:02:07.875271 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.4.2, https://matplotlib.org/ 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 10 (All the time) 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 (None at all) Use of Digital Object Identifier, South Africa

Tools used for DOI

2021-08-04T21:02:08.647472 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.4.2, https://matplotlib.org/ Which tool is used for Digital Object Identifier, South Africa

ORCID

Using ORCID for South Africa Count Percentage
Yes 14 66.6667
No 3 14.2857

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2021-08-04T21:02:09.106827 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.4.2, https://matplotlib.org/ 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 Yes No Using ORCID, South Africa

Good practices

This section comprises sections that focus on the technical and development aspects of the RSEs’ work. They aim to understand good practices in developing software.

We chose two broad measures to provide an insight into sustainability: the bus factor and technical hand over planning.

  • The bus factor is a measure of the number of developers who understand a specific software project and could, with only a cursory review of the project, maintain or extend the code. A project with a bus factor of 1 is completely reliant on only one developer. If this developer finds new employment, becomes ill or is hit by the titular bus, then the project will fail. A high bus factor provides some confidence that the project can be sustained even if a developer leaves.

  • A technical hand over plan is used to introduce a new developer to a software project. These plans cover basic information, such as the license and location of the software, a repository, a description of the software architecture, a summary of development plans and any other information that a new developer would need to understand the software. A project that has written (and maintained) a technical hand over plan can withstand the departure of a developer, even a key developer, significantly better than one without such a plan.

Developing software requires a set of good practices to ensure the quality of the subsequent analysis as well as the robustness of the developed software, to name a few of important aspects. We wanted to see if the implementation of some simple but essential good practices were a reality beside the bus factor and technical hand over planning.

When developing software, version control and testing can be seen as tool to enhance the quality of the developed software, especially considering the importance of code review and sharing in public funded places such as academia.

For testing, we asked the participants to choose any of the following testing methods:

  • Test engineers conduct testing
  • Developers conduct testing
  • Users conduct testing
  • No formal testing

Obviously, the test engineers conduct testing is the most robust testing method but may not be possible in smaller projects while no formal testing should not occur in any ideal scenario, regardless of the size of the project.

We also asked the participants if they use any version control tools through a list of choice. And finally we asked them which repository they are currently using for their most important project.

Bus factor

Bus factor for South Africa Count Percentage
0 2 9.52381
1 14 66.6667
2 3 14.2857
3 2 9.52381

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2021-08-04T21:01:30.939284 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.4.2, https://matplotlib.org/ 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 3.0 2.0 1.0 0.0 Bus factor, South Africa

Presence of transition plan

Presence of transition plan for South Africa Count Percentage Percentage in 2017 Difference with previous year
Yes 5 23.8095 13.3333 10.4762
No 16 76.1905 86.6667 -10.4762

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2021-08-04T21:01:31.178008 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.4.2, https://matplotlib.org/ 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 No Yes 76% 24% Presence of transition plan, South Africa −10 0 10 Δ

Use of version control

Use of version control for South Africa Count Percentage Percentage in 2017 Difference with previous year
Git 17 73.913 nan nan
SVN 3 13.0435 10.5263 2.51716
None 3 13.0435 15.7895 -2.746
CVS 0 0 5.26316 -5.26316
Mercurial 0 0 0 0

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2021-08-04T21:01:31.541206 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.4.2, https://matplotlib.org/ 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 Mercurial CVS None SVN Git 0% 0% 13% 13% 74% Use of version control, South Africa −5 0 Δ

Testing strategies

Testing strategies for South Africa Count Percentage Percentage in 2017 Difference with previous year
No formal testing 3 13.0435 26.3158 -13.2723
No formal testing but users provide feedback 11 47.8261 42.1053 5.72082
The developers do their own testing 14 60.8696 57.8947 2.97483
Test engineers conduct testing 1 4.34783 10.5263 -6.17849

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2021-08-04T21:01:31.907609 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.4.2, https://matplotlib.org/ 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 Test engineers conduct testing The developers do their own testing No formal testing but users provide feedback No formal testing 4% 61% 48% 13% Testing strategies, South Africa −10 0 Δ

Repository

2021-08-04T21:01:33.205478 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.4.2, https://matplotlib.org/ Repository, South Africa

Tools and programming languages

On technical details we wanted to know which of the programming languages are mostly used by the RSEs. We give them a multi-choice list inspired by the results published by Stackoverflow.

We also wanted to know which operating system they use for work.

Questions in this section:

  • Which operating system do you primarily use for development? (one choice)
  • What programming languages do you use at work? Please select all that apply. (multiple choice)

Programming languages

Programming languages for South Africa Count Percentage Percentage in 2017 Difference with previous year
Python 14 60.8696 42.1053 18.7643
SQL 6 26.087 15.7895 10.2975
R 6 26.087 15.7895 10.2975
Java 4 17.3913 5.26316 12.1281
C++ 3 13.0435 15.7895 -2.746
C 3 13.0435 21.0526 -8.00915
JavaScript 3 13.0435 15.7895 -2.746
C# 2 8.69565 10.5263 -1.83066
PHP 2 8.69565 0 8.69565
Perl 2 8.69565 5.26316 3.43249
Assembly 1 4.34783 5.26316 -0.915332
TypeScript 1 4.34783 0 4.34783
Scala 1 4.34783 0 4.34783
Matlab 1 4.34783 5.26316 -0.915332
Julia 1 4.34783 0 4.34783
Visual Basic 1 4.34783 5.26316 -0.915332
Groovy 1 4.34783 0 4.34783
Go 1 4.34783 0 4.34783
Erlang 1 4.34783 0 4.34783
Rust 0 0 0 0
VBA 0 0 5.26316 -5.26316
VB.NET 0 0 5.26316 -5.26316
Clojure 0 0 0 0
Swift 0 0 0 0
CoffeeScript 0 0 0 0
Smalltalk 0 0 0 0
Common Lisp 0 0 0 0
Haskell 0 0 0 0
Ruby 0 0 0 0
Hack 0 0 0 0
Elixir 0 0 0 0
F# 0 0 0 0
Objective-C 0 0 0 0
Fortran 0 0 15.7895 -15.7895
Lua 0 0 0 0
Dart 0 0 0 0

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2021-08-04T21:04:22.878258 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.4.2, https://matplotlib.org/ 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 Dart Lua Fortran Objective-C F# Elixir Hack Ruby Haskell Common Lisp Smalltalk CoffeeScript Swift Clojure VB.NET VBA Rust Erlang Go Groovy Visual Basic Julia Matlab Scala TypeScript Assembly Perl PHP C# JavaScript C C++ Java R SQL Python 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 4% 4% 4% 4% 4% 4% 4% 4% 4% 9% 9% 9% 13% 13% 13% 17% 26% 26% 61% Programming languages, South Africa 0 20 Δ

Operating systems

Operating systems for South Africa Count Percentage Percentage in 2017 Difference with previous year
GNU/Linux 14 73.6842 54.5455 19.1388
Windows 5 26.3158 18.1818 8.13397

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2021-08-04T21:04:23.413175 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.4.2, https://matplotlib.org/ 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 Windows GNU/Linux 26% 74% Operating systems, South Africa 0 20 Δ

Job satisfaction

Job satisfaction is an essential pulse to take about a community’s health. It helps to track the evolution and the current state of the RSEs within their role and to catch any sign of structural or organisational dysfunction that are translated into well-being. There are a lot of different metrics to measure the quality of a job on a personal and psychological level [1]. Several models exist to understand the link between different factors of job satisfaction and turnover intention [2]–[6]. Turnover intention is an important measure that is highly associated with the risk of employees leaving the organisation [3]. Job satisfaction is important in retaining RSEs. Perceived employability provides information on how workers values their own skills in regard of the market. To measure the different attitudes toward the RSE role, we used scales that have been created in [5], [6], [7], [8]. These are Likert scale [7], which are 5 point ordinal scales graduated from Strongly disagree to Strongly agree. Each scale is composed of several so called items (i.e. questions) that each measure one attitude.

Beside these specific concepts we asked more general question about their satisfaction in their current position and their satisfaction with their career in general with a range of answers from 0 (not at all satisfied) to 10 (completely satisfied).

The specific questions about their job satisfaction reflect, in general, the same opinion as the two more generic questions. However, the granularity helps to identify a couple of issues that would not appears with generic questions:

  • Recognition: These questions ask if the RSEs feel that they receive enough information about their work and their performance.
  • The turnover intention: These questions aim to measure the desire to quit their current position.
  • The perceived employability: This concept is linked to the previous one. People may not have the intention to leave their jobs, not because they like it, but because they fear they are not employable.
  • The possibility of progression: This question aims to study the possibility of evolution for the RSEs, if information is available and if they see a possibility of evolution within their current career. This is the only questions that clearly received negative answers.

Questions in this section:

All questions were asked in a Likert scale.

  • In general, how satisfied are you with your current position?
  • In general, how satisfied are you with your career?
  • Do you feel that your contribution to research is recognised by your supervisor/line manager?
  • Do you feel that your contribution to research is recognised by the researchers you work with?
  • Do you feel that your contribution to research is recognised by your institution?
  • How often do you consider leaving your job?
  • I would accept another job at the same compensation level if I was offered it
  • It would not be very difficult for me to get an equivalent job in a different institution
  • My experience is in demand on the labour market
  • It is likely that I will gain a promotion within my current group
  • The process I have to complete to gain a promotion is clear and understandable
  • There are many opportunities within my chosen career plan
  • It is likely that my next position will be an Research Software Engineer / Research

/References/

  1. B. Aziri, “Job satisfaction: A literature review,” vol. 3, no. 4, pp. 77–86.
  2. N. De Cuyper, S. Mauno, U. Kinnunen, and A. Mkikangas, “The role of job resources in the relation between perceived employability and turnover intention: A prospective two-sample study,” vol. 78, no. 2, pp. 253–263.
  3. A. B. Bakker and E. Demerouti, “The job demands-resources model: State of the art,” vol. 22, no. 3, pp. 309–328.
  4. G. H. L. Cheng and D. K. S. Chan, “Who Suffers More from Job Insecurity? A Meta-Analytic Review.” vol. 57, no. 2, p. 272.
  5. E. R. Thompson and F. T. Phua, “A brief index of affective job satisfaction,” vol. 37, no. 3, pp. 275–307.
  6. L. Greenhalgh and Z. Rosenblatt, “Job insecurity: Toward conceptual clarity,” pp. 438–448.
  7. R. Likert, “A technique for the measurement of attitudes.” vol. 22, no. 140, p. 55.

General satisfaction

2021-08-04T21:04:47.551513 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.4.2, https://matplotlib.org/ 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 Percentage satisGen1. In general, how satisfied are you with your current position satisGen2. In general, how satisfied are you with your career 7 6 14 12 7 12 7 12 21 6 21 12 21 25 12 7 6 14 12 7 12 7 12 21 6 21 12 21 25 12 General satisfaction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 General satisfaction: South Africa

Recognition

2021-08-04T21:04:48.329609 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.4.2, https://matplotlib.org/ 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 Percentage satisGen1. In general, how satisfied are you with your current position satisGen2. In general, how satisfied are you with your career 7 6 14 12 7 12 7 12 21 6 21 12 21 25 12 7 6 14 12 7 12 7 12 21 6 21 12 21 25 12 Recognition 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Recognition: South Africa

Turn-over intention

2021-08-04T21:04:49.231835 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.4.2, https://matplotlib.org/ 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 Percentage satisGen1. In general, how satisfied are you with your current position satisGen2. In general, how satisfied are you with your career 7 6 14 12 7 12 7 12 21 6 21 12 21 25 12 7 6 14 12 7 12 7 12 21 6 21 12 21 25 12 Consider leaving job 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Consider leaving job: South Africa 2021-08-04T21:04:50.037517 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.4.2, https://matplotlib.org/ 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 Percentage satisGen1. In general, how satisfied are you with your current position satisGen2. In general, how satisfied are you with your career 7 6 14 12 7 12 7 12 21 6 21 12 21 25 12 7 6 14 12 7 12 7 12 21 6 21 12 21 25 12 Would accept another job at same compensation 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Would accept another job at same compensation: South Africa

Perceived employability

2021-08-04T21:04:50.824243 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.4.2, https://matplotlib.org/ 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 Percentage satisGen1. In general, how satisfied are you with your current position satisGen2. In general, how satisfied are you with your career 7 6 14 12 7 12 7 12 21 6 21 12 21 25 12 7 6 14 12 7 12 7 12 21 6 21 12 21 25 12 Perceived employability 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Perceived employability: South Africa

Progression in the current role

2021-08-04T21:04:51.635435 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.4.2, https://matplotlib.org/ 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 Percentage satisGen1. In general, how satisfied are you with your current position satisGen2. In general, how satisfied are you with your career 7 6 14 12 7 12 7 12 21 6 21 12 21 25 12 7 6 14 12 7 12 7 12 21 6 21 12 21 25 12 Progression in the current role 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Progression in the current role: South Africa

Research software engineer

In this section we wanted to know if the participants are member or not of local organisations and if they are interested to participate to conference specific for RSE.

We also asked them to tell them which skills is important as RSE and which they and to acquire for their current role.

Questions in this section

  • Are you a member of an association of Research Software Developers (e.g. AUS-RSE, CANARIE, DE-RSE, NZ_RSE, UK RSE, …)? (yes-no)
  • Would you be interested in joining such an organisation? (yes-no)
  • What is important for such an organisation? (multiple choice)
  • Would you like to attend a conference about software development in academia? (yes-no)
  • How did you learn the skills you need to become an Research Software Engineer / Research Software Developer? (free text)
  • What three skills would you like to acquire or improve to help your work as a Research Software Engineer/ Research Software Developer? The skills can be technical and non-technical (free text)

RSE member

RSE Member for South Africa Count Percentage Percentage in 2017 Difference with previous year
Yes nan nan nan nan
No 14 100 100 0

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2021-08-04T21:06:24.426586 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.4.2, https://matplotlib.org/ 0 20 40 60 80 100 No Yes 100% RSE Member, South Africa −0.05 0.00 0.05 Δ

Joining a RSE/RSD association

Joining a RSE/RSD association for South Africa Count Percentage Percentage in 2017 Difference with previous year
Yes 9 90 54.5455 35.4545
No 1 10 45.4545 -35.4545

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2021-08-04T21:06:24.662698 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.4.2, https://matplotlib.org/ 0 20 40 60 80 No Yes 10% 90% Joining a RSE/RSD association, South Africa −25 0 25 Δ

What is important for such an organisation

What is important for such an organisation for South Africa Count Percentage Percentage in 2017 Difference with previous year
Job opportunities 8 34.7826 10.5263 24.2563
Networking 7 30.4348 21.0526 9.38215
Research collaborations 7 30.4348 21.0526 9.38215
Training 7 30.4348 10.5263 19.9085
Research software standards and interoperability definition 7 30.4348 15.7895 14.6453

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2021-08-04T21:06:25.003347 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.4.2, https://matplotlib.org/ 0 10 20 30 Research software standards and interoperability definition Training Research collaborations Networking Job opportunities 30% 30% 30% 30% 35% What is important for such an organisation, South Africa 0 25 Δ

Attending a national conference of RSE/RSD

Attending a national conference of RSE/RSD for South Africa Count Percentage
Yes 16 88.8889
No 2 11.1111

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2021-08-04T21:06:25.243054 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.4.2, https://matplotlib.org/ 0 20 40 60 80 Yes No Attending a national conference of RSE/RSD, South Africa

Learning skills for RSE/RSD

2021-08-04T21:06:26.279846 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.4.2, https://matplotlib.org/ Learning skill to become a RSE/RSD, South Africa

Which skills to improve

2021-08-04T21:06:27.803200 image/svg+xml Matplotlib v3.4.2, https://matplotlib.org/ Which skill to improve as RSE/RSD, South Africa