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Discover the top 16 schools competing in athletic conferences, along with essential rules for accessible web design. Learn why a good "Summary Accessibility Score" doesn't guarantee full accessibility and how to implement accessible design practices effectively.
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Athletic Rivalries and Web Accessibility Who Is in the Sweet 16 This Year? Jon Gunderson, Ph.D. University of Illinois at Urbana/Champaign E-mail: jongund@illinois.edu Data and additional details at: http://webaccessibility.cita.illinois.edu/data
Summary Score Rules • Titling • H1 Element • H1 and Title • Sub Headings • Nesting • Form Controls • Labels • Data Tables • TH Elements • Summary • IDs Unique • Headers Attribute • Images • Alt Text • Layout Tables • Nesting
Danger! Danger! Danger! • Just because a website has a good “Summary Accessibility Score” does not mean it is accessible. • The Summary Accessibility Score just means the patterns of mark for highly accessible websites are present (100%) or not (0%) • Many factors that effect accessibility are not included in the score
Accessible Design • Accessibility isbuilt into a website, not added on at the end of the development process • Use Best Practices coding practices:http://html.cita.illinois.edu • Use tools like fae to verify accessibility features • Test with students, faculty and staff with disabilities
Measurement Tool Illinois Functional Accessibility Evaluator (fae) http://fae.cita.illinois.edu Free service of the University of Illinois