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Android Developer Jobs in Alberta (NOW HIRING)

Pason is seeking a Software Developer for the Enterprise Applications team (EA) with a strong background in building web and mobile applications. This role will be responsible for developing, testing ...

In this role, you will collaborate with cross-functional teams, including developers, designers ... Hands-on testing across iOS and Android platforms using emulators, simulators, and real devices.

Proficient with and strong knowledge of all operating systems such as Windows, Android & iOS and be ... Computer Engineering is an asset * Proficiency with cloud applications and tools, including ...

Cloud and platform infrastructure, data services, and developer tooling * AI-assisted analytics, search, and generative AI Technologies used vary by team and include: * Languages such as Java, C#, F ...

Cloud and platform infrastructure, data services, and developer tooling * AI-assisted analytics, search, and generative AI Technologies used vary by team and include: * Languages such as Java, C#, F ...

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Android Developer information

See Alberta salary details

$30.5K

$114.3K

$168K

How much do android developer jobs pay per year?

As of Jun 2, 2026, the average yearly pay for android developer in Alberta is $114,345.00, according to ZipRecruiter salary data. Most workers in this role earn between $91,000.00 and $134,500.00 per year, depending on experience, location, and employer.

What Do Android Developers Do?

As an Android developer, your responsibilities and duties vary, depending on your position and the size of your team. You may be involved in the planning stage, aggregating requirements for the app, and planning how it will be developed. You may be part of the coding team that writes the program. Some developers work on the testing phase before the app is launched, and others work on patches to fix bugs as they are discovered. Coding updates and seeing them through to release is often a long-term and ongoing aspect of Android development. If you work independently or for a small firm, you may be involved in all phases of the development life cycle, whereas those employed by larger firms likely have specialized roles.

What are the key skills and qualifications needed to thrive as an Android Developer, and why are they important?

To thrive as an Android Developer, you need strong proficiency in Java or Kotlin, experience with Android SDK, and a solid understanding of mobile app architecture, typically supported by a degree in computer science or related fields. Familiarity with tools such as Android Studio, version control systems like Git, and knowledge of APIs and libraries is also essential. Creative problem-solving, attention to detail, and effective communication help developers deliver robust apps and collaborate well with teams. These skills and qualities are crucial for building high-quality, user-friendly applications that meet both technical and business requirements.

How do Android Developers typically collaborate with designers and product managers during the app development process?

Android Developers often work closely with designers to ensure that app interfaces are both visually appealing and technically feasible. They participate in regular meetings with product managers to clarify requirements, discuss project timelines, and prioritize features. Collaboration tools such as Jira, Figma, and Slack are commonly used to facilitate communication and feedback loops. This teamwork helps ensure that the final product aligns with both user expectations and business objectives.

What are Android Developers?

Android Developers are software professionals who design, build, and maintain applications for devices running the Android operating system. They use programming languages such as Java or Kotlin and work with Android Studio, the official integrated development environment. Android Developers are responsible for creating user-friendly, secure, and efficient mobile apps, often collaborating with designers and other engineers to deliver high-quality experiences. Their work can range from building simple utilities to complex applications for smartphones, tablets, or wearable devices.

Who earns more, iOS or Android Developer?

Android Developers and iOS Developers typically have similar earning potential, but iOS Developers often earn slightly higher salaries due to the premium market for Apple devices and apps. Salary differences can also depend on experience, location, and specific skills such as proficiency in Swift or Kotlin, and familiarity with development tools like Xcode or Android Studio.
What are the most commonly searched types of Android Developer jobs in Alberta? The most popular types of Android Developer jobs in Alberta are:
What are popular job titles related to Android Developer jobs in Alberta? For Android Developer jobs in Alberta, the most frequently searched job titles are:
What job categories do people searching Android Developer jobs in Alberta look for? The top searched job categories for Android Developer jobs in Alberta are:

Software Developer (Casper Team)

Acuity Insights

Calgary, AB

Full-time

Posted 3 days ago


Job description

Intermediate or Senior level | Remote within Canada

A high-scale product, end-to-end ownership, and real problems to solve.

Casper is one of Acuity Insights' core products, used by hundreds of programs globally to make high-stakes admissions decisions with greater confidence. It helps programs look beyond academic metrics by evaluating how applicants think, reason, and respond in complex situations, consistently and at scale.

Casper supports approximately 160,000 applicants each year, with individual test sessions ranging from 3,000 to 5,000 applicants at a time. It's a system where reliability, performance, and judgment matter in real-world conditions.

We're hiring two Software Developers to join the Casper team: one Intermediate and one Senior. You'll work on a product with over a decade of production history: stable, widely used, revenue-critical, and actively evolving.

As George (Development Manager) puts it, "This isn't a product you work on from the edges. You're working on the system itself."

This is not a greenfield role. It's also not maintenance-only. Some parts of the system are well-established; others need modernization, clearer patterns, stronger testing, and thoughtful technical stewardship. You'll help keep an important product healthy while building the next capabilities that make Casper more valuable, resilient, and ready for what comes next.

As AI reshapes how applicants prepare and respond, Casper is adapting too. The engineering work behind it is becoming more complex, more consequential, and more interesting, from how the team builds software day to day to how the product protects trust and test integrity.

What you'll work on

There's no clean separation between "maintenance" and "new work" on this team. Both matter, and both are shared.

In your first few months, your focus will be on upgrade, stability, and reliability work, helping move Casper onto supported versions of key technologies and building a strong understanding of how the system behaves in production.

Over time, that balance shifts. You'll move into more product-oriented work, contributing to how Casper evolves in response to changing market needs.

Right away, you'll likely be working on core upgrade and stability work, helping move Casper onto supported versions of Meteor and MongoDB, improving reliability, and getting familiar with how the system behaves in production. This work is how the team builds the context needed to safely evolve a system at this scale.

From there, you'll move into work that shapes where Casper goes next.

That includes things like:

Score evolution
Rethinking how Casper scores are calculated, processed, and presented, a system that spans multiple services and connects everything from test delivery to program-facing insights.

Test integrity in an AI world
Designing how Casper detects, deters, and responds to policy violations in an environment where applicants have access to increasingly capable AI tools.

Making the product more understandable and defensible
Improving how programs interpret results, from analytics to score presentation, so decisions are clearer, more consistent, and easier to stand behind.

Supporting more complex program structures
Like institutions operating across multiple campuses and geographies, where the product needs to reflect more nuanced real-world use.

Some of this work is well-defined. Some of it is still taking shape. You'll be part of figuring that out.

How the team works

Casper operates on a shared ownership model. There isn't a strict separation between parts of the system, everyone contributes across the stack and across domains.

That includes core areas like authentication, payments, test delivery, scoring, alerts, and production support.

You'll be part of a team that is collectively responsible for keeping the system running, improving it over time, and responding when things go wrong. 

The kind of engineering environment you'll join

Casper is built primarily with JavaScript, Meteor, MongoDB, React, and AWS.

The system reflects over a decade of evolution, with contributions from many developers over time. You'll need to be comfortable navigating different patterns and approaches, understanding why things were built the way they were, and improving them thoughtfully.

You'll need to be comfortable reading before rewriting, understanding context before changing direction, and making improvements that move the system forward without slowing the team down.

This is a team that values progress over perfection. We're not trying to rebuild everything. We're trying to make the system better, step by step, while continuing to deliver.

We're specifically looking for developers who are actively working in JavaScript or TypeScript in production today and can ramp quickly in that environment.

This is an AI-first engineering environment. Tools like Copilot, Codex, and Claude are part of how work gets done day to day.

We're looking for developers who already work this way, using AI to explore, build, and iterate faster. This isn't experimental here; it's part of the job.

"AI isn't something we're experimenting with on the side. It's just part of how we build now." - George Guja (Development Manager, Casper)

For the Senior Developer

As a Senior Developer on Casper, you'll help shape how the team approaches both new work and an existing system that's already doing a lot.

This is not a staff-level architecture role. You'll contribute to system design, but you'll also spend a significant portion of your time writing code and improving systems.

You'll spend your time in a mix of building, shaping, and supporting others:

  • contributing to system design and helping the team think through how new work fits into what already exists
  • leading or co-leading more complex backend-heavy initiatives
  • improving code quality and engineering patterns through reviews, pairing, and example
  • strengthening how the team approaches testing and reliability over time
  • defining how the team approaches testing in a mature system (unit, integration, end-to-end)
  • planning and validating production changes, including upgrades and breaking changes
  • mentoring developers who are earlier in their growth
For the Intermediate Developer

As an Intermediate Developer, you'll take on meaningful ownership while building deeper context in a system that has real complexity.

We're targeting mid-to-upper intermediate developers, not someone newly stepping up from a junior role.

You won't be working in isolation or just executing tickets. You'll be working closely with senior developers, contributing to shared problems, and gradually expanding the scope of what you own.

Early on, that might look like:

  • owning parts of upgrade and stability work
  • contributing to bug fixes and small improvements
  • working across both frontend and backend
  • building a strong understanding of production behavior

Over time, we expect that to grow into:

  • owning larger pieces of work end-to-end
  • becoming a go-to person for parts of the system
  • contributing to how work is shaped, not just implemented
What we're looking for in both roles

There are a lot of ways to succeed here, but the developers who tend to do well on this team share a few things in common.

  • They've worked on systems that are already in use, where reliability matters and changes have real impact. They're comfortable stepping into codebases they didn't write, making sense of them quickly, and improving them without needing to start over.
  • They think in trade-offs. They know when to refactor and when to leave something alone. They care about getting things right, but also about moving things forward.
  • They're comfortable with backend-heavy work, even if they identify as full-stack. They understand how data flows through a system, how services interact, and what can go wrong in production.
  • They treat testing and quality as part of the system, not something that happens at the end. They've either worked with or helped improve testing approaches in real environments.
  • They use AI tools as part of their day-to-day workflow. Tools like Copilot, Codex, or Claude aren't new or experimental, they're already integrated into how they explore, write, and refine code.
  • They collaborate directly. They ask questions, share context, and don't wait for perfect clarity before moving forward.
  • And they care about the outcome, not just the implementation. They want to understand why something matters, not just what needs to be built.
On-call & test support expectations

Casper includes shared responsibility for supporting live test sessions:

  • 1-2 sessions per month
  • Typically up to ~5 hours
  • Often scheduled between 6-10 PM Eastern
  • Occasionally overnight (1-5 AM Eastern) for international sessions
  • May occasionally include weekends

These are planned in advance and shared across the team.

How We Support You
  • Transparent compensation. The starting salary for Senior roles is between $145,000 and $155,000 CAD; Intermediate roles range from $120,000 to $142,000 CAD. Final offers reflect experience, scope, market alignment, and internal equity.
  • Learning that grows with you. A $3,000 annual learning budget to invest in your development, whether that's deepening technical skills, building confidence, or exploring new areas of interest.
  • Shared success. Access to employee stock options, so you share in the value you help create.
  • Remote-first work. Fully remote within Canada, with up to six weeks per year to work internationally.
  • Time to rest and reset. Self-directed vacation (most teammates take 4-6 weeks annually), monthly Acuity Days (a collective Friday off), plus a two-week company-wide closure each December.
  • Comprehensive care. Health benefits from day one for you and your dependents.
  • Future-focused support. A 2% GRSP matching program to help you plan ahead.
  • Support for growing families. A 16-week parental leave top-up beyond EI, available to all parents.
What Happens After You Apply

We review every application carefully, looking for people who are caring, curious, driven, and resilient. Whether you apply directly, are referred, or connect through a recruiter or hiring manager, you'll receive equal consideration.

We don't use AI to evaluate applications, though you may be automatically screened out if you don't meet baseline requirements (e.g. Canadian residency and valid work authorization). In some interviews, AI may help with note-taking, but all evaluations and decisions are made by real humans.

Our interviews are two-way conversations. We want to understand your career, abilities, and goals, and help you assess whether this opportunity and team are the right fit for you. 

Steps in the Process

Our hiring process typically takes 2-4 weeks from initial conversation to final decision. 

  • Application Review. A real person reviews your application for potential fit.
  • Intro Chat. An informal conversation with our recruiter to explore your career path, goals, and what you're looking for, while giving you a chance to learn about Acuity Insights.
  • Technical Deep Dive. A conversation with the hiring manager focused on your experience and how you approach real-world engineering problems. This may include discussing systems you've worked on, trade-offs you've made, and, in some cases, a lightweight practical or collaborative exercise. We'll share what to expect in advance.
  • Team Conversations. You'll meet 1:1 with future teammates to assess alignment and ways of working.
  • Decision. The hiring manager reviews feedback and typically makes a decision within 2-4 business days.
  • Offer & Reference Checks. If it's a match, we move to offer, pending a digital reference check.
Life at Acuity Insights

We're a remote-first team of 135+ people who care deeply about our work and about each other.

Our culture is intentionally designed. As we've grown, we've made deliberate choices about how we work together, prioritizing trust, flexibility, and a sustainable pace so people can do meaningful work over the long term.

That commitment has been recognized externally. Acuity Insights has been named one of Canada's Top Small & Medium Employers for the second consecutive year, reflecting our focus on building a strong, people-first environment.

Day to day, that shows up in how we collaborate:

  • High trust and autonomy in how work gets done
  • Thoughtful, async-friendly communication across a distributed team
  • Space for deep work, balanced with intentional moments of connection
  • A culture grounded in care, curiosity, and shared purpose

As we continue to grow, we're focused on maintaining that balance, building a company where people can do their best work and grow over time, without losing what makes the environment feel human.

About Acuity Insights

Acuity Insights builds products that help higher education institutions make better decisions about people, from admissions through to development.

Our work is grounded in a simple idea: that people are more than their grades, and that potential can be understood and developed, not just measured.

Our Casper situational judgment test (SJT), created by researchers at McMaster University, has been completed by over 1 million applicants and is one of the most widely used open-response SJTs in higher education, backed by nearly 20 years of research.

Today, we are evolving our products to better connect assessment, insight, and development, helping institutions not just identify potential, but actively support its growth over time.