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Published byOswin Lewis Modified over 9 years ago
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1 Testing Web site Accessibility Review of disabilities, legislation & techniques
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2 What we’ll cover Web accessibility overview Accessibility tools Break out session Summarise findings Accessibility toolkit
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3 Web Accessibility Overview Disabilities Legislation ICT Compliance
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4 What is Web site Accessibility? Assistive technologies TTS (text-to-speech) browsers Text-only browsers Voice-enabled browsers Keyboard or mouse commands Braille devices Screen magnification
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5 Why is it Important? More people accessing the web Disabled : 10% to 20% Average age of population in many countries is increasing Carry-over benefits for other users Legal requirements
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6 Disabilities Low Vision Hearing Motor Skills Cognitive Abilities Low Grade Technology
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7 Low Vision Background colour Contrast Colour scheme can be over-ridden Avoid Graphics Italics Underline CAPITALISATION
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8 Hearing Captions Transcripts
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9 Motor Skills Key Tabs <IMG SRC="banner.gif" ALT="Navigation banner" WIDTH="580" HEIGHT="21"BORDER="0" usemap="#bannermap “ > <AREA SHAPE="rect" HREF="internal.html" ALT="Employee information" COORDS="506,2 577,18" TABINDEX= “ 3 “ > <AREA SHAPE="rect" HREF="news.html" ALT="News and events" COORDS="186,2 303,18" TABINDEX="1 “ > <AREA SHAPE="rect" HREF="searches.html" ALT="Search" COORDS="311,2 475,18" TABINDEX="2">
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10 Cognitive Abilities Use clear language Simple Navigation Write for the web Use non-text examples
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11 Low Grade Technology Bandwidth Old Machines Old Browsers
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12 Legislation History What’s Affected? Responsibilities
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13 Legislation History Disability Discrimination Act of 1995 Special Educational Needs and Disability Act 2001 01 September 2002 ‘Reasonable Adjustments’ Assistive Technologies Accessible Services
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14 What’s Affected - Accessible ICT Departmental, Faculty, Institutional Web sites Intranets VLEs & MLEs Information Gateways Resource portals Web-based applications any digital resource
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15 Responsibilities – in theory ‘Reasonable Adjustments’
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16 Responsibilities – in practice Validate using available tools W3C Guideline compliant Accessibility Policy in place
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17 Accessibility Tools Preliminary Review Conformance Evaluation Automated Evaluation
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18 Preliminary Review Turn off images Turn off sound Change font size Set screen resolution Change display colour Use tab keys
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19 Conformance Evaluation Images & animations Image maps Multimedia/Scripts & applets Hypertext links Page organisation Frames Tables
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20 Validation Tools W3C Validation Service HTML and CSS validation service http://validator.w3.org Bobby CAST Automated Accessibility service http://www.cast.org/bobby Lynx Checker A tool that simulates a text-based web browser http://www.delorie.com/web/lynxview.html Vischeck A tool that simulates colour-blindness http://vischeck.com/vischeckURL.php3
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21 Break out session Your HE Website Select 3 key pages (home, prospectus, other) Preliminary Review Conformance Evaluation Automated Evaluation
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22 Techniques to keep in mind Provide text equivalents for all non-text elements Provide summaries of tables Organise content clearly Provide alternative content for all plug-in elements
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23 Accessibility Policy We are committed to ensuring accessibility of our Web sites for people with disabilities. New and updated Web content produced by us organization will conform to W3C/WAI's Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 1.0, Conformance Level A…
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24 Web site help
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25 Prioritise Compliance Home page and high-traffic pages All new pages Medium-traffic pages longer-term goal of overall compliance
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26 Accessibility Toolkit Resources handout Web site evaluation checklist Preliminary review Conformance evaluation Automated evaluation
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27 Thank you Questions…?
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