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Making Course Accessibility Accessible Elizabeth J. Pyatt, Ph.D. (ejp10@psu.edu) Christian Vinten-Johansen (cjohansen@psu.edu) Penn State
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What is Accessibility? “Universal Design” Designing for the largest audience possible regardless of disability or ability – UMN Duluth Web Glossary “Universal Access” “…regardless of disability, location, device or speed of connection to the Internet [or audio]”
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Example Needs Visually impaired On a screen reader Hearing Impaired Captions/transcripts needed Low Vision Legibility crucial, may zoon to 200% Motion Impaired (hands) Keyboard access critical
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Stakeholders Users with disabilities Multiple needs for visual, hearing, motion, cognitive disabilities Web Developers Training & tools needed Some chamomille tea as well? Instructors How do we handle immense volume online materials from “non- professionals”?
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Case: Severe Visual Impairment Requires a screen reader to read Web content aloud Multimedia, images need to be described Not all descriptions need to be hidden Program elements need to identify themselves Hidden Audience Text-based mobile device, missing plugin, images disabled, or broken image link
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What the “ALT Tag” does Piston diagram images Text describes piston position
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ALT Tagger in ANGEL CMS Enter information “Alternative Text” field when uploading images
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New Apps Gotcha Not all apps and plugins include information for screen reader Old iTunes: MP3 music files were accessbile, but navigation in iTunes was not Some users encounter difficulty creating a login! (esp Flash based interface) Web Forms – Need to signal new information See WAI-ARIA for how to code. JavaScript CAN be accessible.
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Case: Hearing Impaired You cannot hear content Captions, captions, captions (or transcript) Some users more fluent in sign language Hidden Users Forgot headphone in lab Audio cuts out Can’t find one of 5 volume controls Poor audio quality (even for normal hearing) 50% students used captions in online class
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Captions Reveal Information Caption shows how to spell Cole Camplese’s name.
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MovCaption Tool
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Issues: Can we simplify training without losing functionality? Can accessibility be included in curriculum for tech professionals? Who will listen? “Professionals” yes, but others?
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Results of Website Scans Few pages are accessible
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Raising Awareness Events Multi-modal f2f/online Website scans & review meetings Surveys on resource use & constraints Training
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Strategy: Training http://accessibility.psu.edu
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Strategy: Tools Accessible Web Publishing Wizard http://www.virtual508.com/ http://www.virtual508.com/ Microsoft® Word to HTML Microsoft® Powerpoint to HTML MovCaptioner Practical video captioning Shareware – http://www.synchrimedia.com/ Functional Accessibility Evaluator http://fae.cita.uiuc.edu http://fae.cita.uiuc.edu Small, easy to understand reports
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Strategy: Transform ad-hoc to Controlled Processes Deploy content management systems Leverage workflow and roles Obtain media services Automate testing Manual inspection and publication Build community
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Processes Content Management Systems Protected templates and styles preserve accessible markup Workflow for quality assurance Roles for Web publishing Author, designer, faculty SME, editor New role: accessibility editor?
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Strategy: New Role Accessibility Editor CMS workflow-based role Manual review of content Focus on structure and quality Responsibility and accountability Compliance with Section 508 User testing
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Strategy: Building Community Community membership: Users, providers, designers, developers, stakeholders Communication IRC, lists, blogs, fora, conferences Collaboration Code repositories, wikis, ticketing
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Strategy: Building Community Community participation is good for accessibility
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CIC Accessibility Advisory Group Subcommittees: Education and promotion Multimedia and alternative technologies Purchasing Library systems
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Where to Learn More http://accessibility.psu.edu/
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Making Course Accessibility Accessible Elizabeth J. Pyatt, Ph.D. (ejp10@psu.edu) Christian Vinten-Johansen (cjohansen@psu.edu) Penn State
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