The Internet Writer’s Handbook 2/e Web Accessibility Writing for the Web.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
2/23/ Enterprise Web Accessibility Standards Version 2.0 WebMASSters Presentation 2/23/2005.
Advertisements

TNO Human Factors Kampweg 5 / P.O. Box ZG Soesterberg, The Netherlands Phone: Universal accessibility Anita.
Web Accessibility Breaking Down Barriers David Holstius Resource Center for Persons with Disabilities Michigan State University September 27, 2001.
Introduction to Web Accessibility. What is Web Accessibility Web accessibility means that people with disabilities can use the Web Disabilities including.
1 Accessibility CSSE 376, Software Quality Assurance Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology April 16, 2007.
Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) Overview Copyright © World Wide Web Consortium, (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Institut National de.
Designing a Multimedia System Information (Content) Design Structural/Navigational Design Human Computer Interaction (Interactivity Issues)
Accessibility, Usability and Web Standards David Robins NORASIST Annual Meeting September 17, 2007.
Building Accessibility Into The Workflow Rick Ells Computing & Communications University of Washington Seattle, Washington
CM143 - Web Week 11 Accessibility Priority Checkpoints.
Web Accessibility Issues. Why Consider Access Issues ? Discrimination Numbers of disabled students in HE likely to increase Sites designed for the disabled.
Web Accessibility What is it? Why is it important? Sharon Trerise Coordinator of Accessible IT Northeast ADA & IT Center Employment and Disability Institute.
Web Accessibility IS 373—Web Standards Todd Will.
Kathy Gips Will Miller New England ADA & Accessible IT Center voice/tty Funded by the National Institute on Disability.
Americans with Disabilities Act Ms. Sam Wainford.
 What is web accessibility? ture=relatedhttp://
Universal Design & Web Accessibility Iain Murray Kerry Hoath Iain Murray Kerry Hoath.
Debi Orton, Co-Chair NYS Forum IT Accessibility Committee.
Assistive Technology and Web Accessibility University of Hawaii Information Technology Services Jon Nakasone.
Development of Accessible E- documents and Programs for the Visually Impaired Web accessibility testing (v2010)
© Simeon Keates 2008 Usability with Project Lecture 7 – 30/09/09 Dr. Simeon Keates.
Alternative Views of the Web Jon Gunderson, Ph.D. Division of Rehabilitation-Education Services University of Illinois at Urbana/Champaign.
Web Accessibility Bernie D. Davenport & A. Craig Dixon September 26, 2007.
Is Your Website Accessible? Stephanie M. Brown School of Health, Physical Education, and Recreation Indiana University.
Planning an Accessible Website: Beyond Alt Tags Stephanie M. Randolph School of Health, Physical Education, and Recreation Indiana University.
ECA 228 Internet/Intranet Design I Accessibility.
Nov 4, 2002K. Smale - Section 5081 Section 508 What it means for you, the HEASARC and LHEA web developer.
COMM1PCOMM1P Alan Woolrych Accessibility 9 COMM1P9COMM1P9 SCET MSc EC/ECA © Alan Woolrych 2001 Introduction Accessibility “Making Content Available to.
Oreste Signore- WAI/1 Amman, December 2006 WAI Initiative on accessibility Ministerial NEtwoRk for Valorising Activities in digitisation.
Web Accessiblity Carol Gordon SIU Medical Library.
Design and Construction of Accessible Web Sites Michael Burks Chairman Internet Society SIG For Internet Accessibility for People with Disabilities June.
Is Your Site Accessible? Web Site Testing for Accessibility Presented by: The NYS Forum IT Accessibility Committee The NYS Forum Webmasters Guild Northeast.
1 Usability and accessibility of educational web sites Nigel Bevan University of York UK eTEN Tenuta support action.
Emily Gibson The College of New Jersey An Evaluation of Current Software Tools* Evaluation & Repair Software.
Website Accessibility. What is Website Accessibility? Making information on the internet usable and understandable for EVERYONE, including those with.
An Overview 1 Pamela Harrod, DMS 546/446 Presentation, March 17, 2008.
How People with Disabilities Access the Web Web Design – Sec 2-5 Part or all of this lesson was adapted from the University of Washington’s “Web Design.
Section 508 requirements for Federal Website Design Jon Brundage MDCFUG 4/10/01.
Overview of the web accessibility guidelines at RMIT: W3C's WAI Level A Conformance Praneeth Putlur Rajiv Pandya Rohit Sharma.
Planning an Accessible Website: Beyond Alt Tags Stephanie M. Randolph School of Health, Physical Education, and Recreation Indiana University.
Making Web Pages Accessible Chapter 9 Learn how to… List guidelines and standards for making Web sites accessible. List HTML coding practices to make.
ADA Americans with Disabilities Act. Many people with disabilities are unable to access information on websites because of a variety of barriers that.
Chapter 9 Design guidance and design rationale. UIDE Chapter 9 Sources of Design Guidance Standards Standards –User interface standard Design Guidelines.
Date or reference Web Accessibility - an introduction Patrick H. Lauke ISI presentation - 22/11/2004.
Adobe Certified Associate Objectives 1 Setting Project Requirements.
Accessibility and the web Lecturer: Judy Kay References: Readings - W3C - Checklist of Checkpoints for Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 1.0
Accessibility : Designing the Interface and Navigation The Non-Designer’s Web Book Chapter 7 Robin Williams and John Tollett Presented by Sherie Loika.
Technical Communication A Practical Approach Chapter 14: Web Pages and Writing for the Web William Sanborn Pfeiffer Kaye Adkins.
University Web Accessibility Standards An Instructional Training Unit Prepared by Priya Gopalakrishnan IDT Graduate Student Emporia State University, Kansas.
Accessibility Mohammed Alabdulkareem
A centre of expertise in digital information managementwww.ukoln.ac.uk Accessibility and Usability For Web Sites: An Introduction to Web Accessibility.
Sara Di Giorgio Giza, 3 April 2006 WAI Initiative on accessibility Ministerial NEtwoRk for Valorising Activities in digitisation.
Seriously?  HTML  XML  Database fields.
1 GENASYS.usm.maine.edu PT3 Catalyst Grant GENASYS University of Southern Maine 301C Bailey Hall 37 College Avenue, Gorham, ME Generating Assistive.
Web Content Accessibility Leila Styer Washington State University CAHNRS/Computer Resource Unit rev. November 2006.
 Accessibility & Information Architecture Presented by Liz Molleur INF385E April 5 th, 2009.
The User Experience “Keeping Web Accessibility In Mind” Video available online at:
Accessibility Basics on creating accessible websites Accessibility Seth Duffey presentation for MAG Telecommunications.
1 Making an Accessible Web Site Sec 508 Standards – How Tos Evelyn Li University of Wisconsin-Fox Valley.
Web Accessibility. Why accessibility? "The power of the Web is in its universality. Access by everyone regardless of disability is an essential aspect."
Making the Web Accessible to Impaired Users
These standards will serve us well in any technical communication job.
Designing Accessible Web Applications
Introduction to Web Accessibility
Web Content Accessibility Beata M. Ofianewska (DG COMM) 7 December 2006 December 2006 COMM C2.
Website Accessibility
Web Accessibility An Introduction.
International University of Japan
From compliance to usability
Demystifying Web Content Accessibility Guidelines
Presentation transcript:

The Internet Writer’s Handbook 2/e Web Accessibility Writing for the Web

The Internet Writer’s Handbook 2/e Contents Accessibility background Accessibility guidelines References

The Internet Writer’s Handbook 2/e Accessibility: Background

The Internet Writer’s Handbook 2/e Intended Audience of Accessibility Initiatives Users unable to: See, hear, move. Process some types of information. Read or understand text or language. Use a keyboard or mouse. Use a large screen. Have fast Internet connection. Have new browser.

The Internet Writer’s Handbook 2/e Web Accessibility Initiative of the World Wide Web Consortium Developed accessibility guidelines.

The Internet Writer’s Handbook 2/e W3C WAI Standards 1. Provide equivalent alternatives to auditory and visual content. 2. Don't rely on color alone. 3. Use markup and style sheets properly. 4. Clarify natural language usage.

The Internet Writer’s Handbook 2/e W3C WAI Standards 5. Create tables that transform gracefully. 6. Ensure that pages featuring newer technologies transform gracefully. 7. Ensure user control of time-sensitive content changes. 8. Ensure direct accessibility of embedded user interfaces. 9. Design for device-independence. 10. Use interim solutions.

The Internet Writer’s Handbook 2/e W3C WAI Standards 11. Use W3C technologies and guidelines. 12. Provide context and orientation information. 13. Provide clear navigation mechanisms. 14. Ensure that documents are clear and simple.

The Internet Writer’s Handbook 2/e W3C WAI Priority 1 A Web content developer must satisfy this checkpoint. Otherwise, one or more groups will find it impossible to access information in the document. Satisfying this checkpoint is a basic requirement for some groups to be able to use Web documents.

The Internet Writer’s Handbook 2/e W3C WAI Priority 2 A Web content developer should satisfy this checkpoint. Otherwise, one or more groups will find it difficult to access information in the document. Satisfying this checkpoint will remove significant barriers to accessing Web documents.

The Internet Writer’s Handbook 2/e W3C WAI Priority 3 A Web content developer may address this checkpoint. Otherwise, one or more groups will find it somewhat difficult to access information in the document. Satisfying this checkpoint will improve access to Web documents.

The Internet Writer’s Handbook 2/e Accessibility Guidelines

The Internet Writer’s Handbook 2/e 1. Provide equivalent alternatives to auditory and visual content Images Graphical representations of text (including symbols) Image map regions Animations (e.G., Animated gifs) Applets and programmatic objects ASCII art Frames Scripts

The Internet Writer’s Handbook 2/e 1. Provide equivalent alternatives to auditory and visual content Images used as list bullets Spacers Graphical buttons Sounds (played with or without user Interaction) Stand-alone audio files Audio tracks of video Video

The Internet Writer’s Handbook 2/e 1. Provide equivalent alternatives to auditory and visual content Provide redundant text links for each active region of a server-side image map. Provide an auditory description of the important information of the visual track of a multimedia presentation. For any time-based multimedia presentation, synchronize equivalent alternatives (e.g., captions or auditory descriptions of the visual track) with the presentation.

The Internet Writer’s Handbook 2/e 2. Don't rely on color alone Ensure that all information conveyed with color is also available without color (e.g., from context or markup).

The Internet Writer’s Handbook 2/e 3. Use markup and style sheets properly Not priority 1

The Internet Writer’s Handbook 2/e 4. Clarify natural language usage Clearly identify changes in the natural language of a document's text and any text equivalents (e.g., captions).

The Internet Writer’s Handbook 2/e 5. Create tables that transform gracefully For data tables, identify row and column headers. For data tables that have two or more logical levels of row or column headers, use markup to associate data cells and header cells.

The Internet Writer’s Handbook 2/e 6. Ensure that pages featuring new technologies transform gracefully Organize documents so they may be read without style sheets. Ensure that equivalents for dynamic content are updated when the dynamic content changes.

The Internet Writer’s Handbook 2/e Ensure that pages are usable when scripts, applets, or other programmatic objects are turned off or not supported. If this is not possible, provide equivalent information on an alternative accessible page. 6. Ensure that pages featuring new technologies transform gracefully

The Internet Writer’s Handbook 2/e 7. Ensure user control of time- sensitive content changes Until user agents allow users to control flickering, avoid causing the screen to flicker.

The Internet Writer’s Handbook 2/e 8. Ensure direct accessibility of embedded user interfaces Make programmatic elements such as scripts and applets directly accessible or compatible with assistive technologies.

The Internet Writer’s Handbook 2/e 9. Design for device- independence Provide client-side image maps instead of server-side image maps except where the regions cannot be defined with an available geometric shape.

The Internet Writer’s Handbook 2/e 10. Use interim solutions Not Priority 1

The Internet Writer’s Handbook 2/e 11. Use W3C technologies and guidelines Not Priority 1

The Internet Writer’s Handbook 2/e 12. Provide context and orientation information Title each frame to facilitate frame identification and navigation.

The Internet Writer’s Handbook 2/e 13. Provide clear navigation mechanisms Not Priority 1

The Internet Writer’s Handbook 2/e 14. Ensure that documents are clear and simple Use the clearest and simplest language appropriate for a site's content.

The Internet Writer’s Handbook 2/e Tools for Evaluating Accessibility

The Internet Writer’s Handbook 2/e Bobby Web-based public service offered by the Center for Applied Special Technology (CAST). Analyzes Web pages for their accessibility to people with disabilities and compatibility with various browsers.

The Internet Writer’s Handbook 2/e The Wave Tool to help determine your page's accessibility by presenting the "linearized" reading order, ALT text for images and image map areas, and the applet alternatives. inst_disabilities/piat/wave/

The Internet Writer’s Handbook 2/e TOM, the Text-Only Maker Developed at developed at the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA). Converts graphical Web pages into text- only pages or text and graphics Web pages.

The Internet Writer’s Handbook 2/e W3C Checks HTML documents for conformance to W3C HTML and XHTML recommendations and other HTML standards.

The Internet Writer’s Handbook 2/e References

References W3C WAI Access Adobe access.adobe.com IBM Accessibility Center www- 3.ibm.com/able/overview.html Microsoft Accessibility

The Internet Writer’s Handbook 2/e References Center for Applied Special Technology (CAST) Do-IT WebABLE

The Internet Writer’s Handbook 2/e