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Planning an Accessible Website: Beyond Alt Tags

Planning an Accessible Website: Beyond Alt Tags . Stephanie M. Randolph School of Health, Physical Education, and Recreation Indiana University. Session Outline. What is web accessibility? Why is accessibility important? What are the guidelines for evaluating accessibility?

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Planning an Accessible Website: Beyond Alt Tags

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  1. Planning an Accessible Website:Beyond Alt Tags Stephanie M. Randolph School of Health, Physical Education, and Recreation Indiana University

  2. Session Outline • What is web accessibility? • Why is accessibility important? • What are the guidelines for evaluating accessibility? • How do I evaluate my website? • Resources

  3. What is Web Accessibility? • Anyone regardless of ability can use the web. • People can understand, navigate, interact and contribute to the web. • Accessibility benefits everyone, not just individuals with disabilities.

  4. Why is Accessibility Important? • The Web is becoming a bigger part of everyone’s lives • The Web can make many tasks easier for individuals with disabilities • Accessibility is good for business • Some websites are required by law to be accessible (Section 508) • Web accessibility benefits everyone

  5. Different Disabilities That Can Affect Web Accessibility • Visual disabilities • Blindness • Low vision • Color blindness • Hearing impairments • Deafness • Hard of hearing • Physical disabilities • Speech disabilities • Cognitive and neurological disabilities • Dyslexia and dyscalculia • Attention deficit disorder • Intellectual disabilities • Memory impairments • Mental health disabilities • Seizure disorders • Multiple Disabilities • Aging-related conditions

  6. Other Considerations • There are a wide array of different browsers to consider when designing accessible websites • Internet Explorer, Firefox, Opera, text only, screen readers • Different versions • Many individuals still use a dial-up modem to connect to the internet • Some people may only use one type of input devise

  7. Section 508 • 1998 Amendment to the Rehabilitation Act • Federal agencies are required to make their electronic and information technology accessible to employees and the public • Criteria for web-based applications based on the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI).

  8. What are the guidelines for evaluating accessibility? • Web Content Accessibility Guidelines • Current version 1.0 • 2.0 due out soon • WCAG 1.0 versus WCAG 2.0 • Applies more broadly to different technologies • More comprehensive • Testable • Organized differently (guidelines and checkpoints versus principles and success criteria) • If you conform to 1.0, you will probably conform to 2.0

  9. Themes of Accessible Design • Ensure graceful transformation • Guidelines 1-11 • Separate structure from presentation • Provide text alternatives • Provide info that serves the same purpose as audio or visual in ways suited for alternate sensory channels • Create documents that do not rely on one type of hardware

  10. Themes of Accessible Design • Make content understandable and navigable • Guidelines 12-14 • Make language clean and simple • Provide navigation tools and orientation info that is understandable

  11. Priorities • Priority 1: Must satisfy this checkpoint • Priority 2: Should satisfy this checkpoint • Priority 3: May address this checkpoint

  12. Guideline 1 1. Provide equivalent alternatives to auditory and visual content • Be as descriptive but succinct as possible • Long descriptions <IMG src="97sales.gif" alt="Sales for 1997" longdesc="sales97.html"> • Caption video and multi-media • http://www.ncaonline.org/monographs/19inclusion.shtml Not So Good – wedding photo Good – a bride feeds wedding cake to the groom

  13. Guideline 2 2. Don’t rely on color alone • Examine with colors turned off • Provide sufficient color contrast • Not So Good – Our school is the best in the nation. • Good – Our school is the best in the nation.

  14. Guideline 3 and 4 3. Use markup and style sheets and do so properly • Separate structure from presentation • HTML and CSS • Use the right DOCTYPE • HTML 4.01 Transitional 4. Clarify natural language usage • Identify primary language – EN • Write out abbreviations the first time they occur in a document

  15. Guideline 5 and 6 5. Create tables that transform gracefully • Avoid using tables for layouts • Identify row and column headers • <TH id="header1"> and <TD headers="header1"> 6. Ensure that pages featuring new technologies transform gracefully • Test pages without style sheets and scripting

  16. Guideline 7 and 8 7. Ensure user control of time-sensitive content changes • Avoid screen flicker and text blink 8. Ensure direct accessibility of embedded user interfaces • http://www.indiana.edu/~hperdev/webrequest/index.php

  17. Guideline 9 and 10 9. Design for device-independence • Tab indexes and access keys • http://www.ncaonline.org/index.shtml 10. Use interim solutions • No pop-ups without alerting user • Don’t use auto refresh

  18. Guideline 11 and 12 11. Use W3C technologies and guidelines • HTML, XHTML and XML for structure • SMIL for multi-media • CSS and XSL for style • PNG for graphics • Avoid deprecated tags 12. Provide context and orientation information • Identify frames (or don’t use them)

  19. Guideline 13 and 14 13. Provide clear navigation mechanisms • Skip over navigation • <a href="#content" accesskey="2" title="Skip to content">content</a> 14. Ensure that documents are clear and simple • Simple language and grammar Not So Good – for a description of our program, click here Good – for a description of our program, please visit our program info page.

  20. How Do I Evaluate My Website? • Review guidelines and plan ahead! • Examine pages using graphical browsers • Use different types and versions • Turn off style sheets, images, etc. • Examine pages using specialized browsers • Text-only • Screen readers • Check PDF’s and other technologies • Validate site for accessibility when doing other validation checks • Have actual users test it out

  21. Browser Checks

  22. Resources • Web Accessibility • Web Accessibility Initiative (http://www.w3.org/WAI/) • WebAIM (http://www.webaim.org/) • Accessibility Forum (http://www.accessibilityforum.org/) • Dive Into Accessibility (http://diveintoaccessibility.org/) • Web Axe (http://webaxe.blogspot.com/) • Section 508 • Section508.gov (http://www.section508.gov) • Validation Tools • Accessify.com (http://accessify.com/tools-and-wizards/) • Watchfire (http://webxact.watchfire.com/) • ATRC Web Accessibility Checker (http://checker.atrc.utoronto.ca/index.html) • Hermish (http://www.hermish.com/) • Cynthia Says (http://www.cynthiasays.com/) • Anybrowser.com (http://www.anybrowser.com/siteviewer.html)

  23. Resources • Browsers • Lynx(http://www.vordweb.co.uk/standards/download_lynx.htm) • JAWS (http://www.freedomscientific.com/fs_products/software_jaws.asp) • Opera (http://www.opera.com/) • Other • Colorblind Web Page Filter (http://colorfilter.wickline.org/) • Using Opera to check accessibility (http://www.webaim.org/resources/opera/) • Magpie (http://ncam.wgbh.org/webaccess/magpie/) • Adobe Accessibility Resource Center (http://www.adobe.com/accessibility/) • Web developer toolbar (http://chrispederick.com/work/web-developer/) • Flash (http://www.webaim.org/techniques/flash/)

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