Transcript Slide 1

Accessibility
Introduction to Disability Awareness
June 29, 2011
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Index
● Review
Demographics
● Discuss
Assistive Technology
● Review
Timeline and Issues
● Next
Steps
Demographics
• 18% of the population
have a disability
• 12% of this population
have a severe disability
• Some people are born with a disability while
others get sick or have an accident
Demographics
● Like
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cancer, disabilities are an aging issue
Types of Disabilities
● Blind
and Visually Impaired
● Hearing
● Speech
Impaired
disabilities
● Cognitive
● Mobility
● Others
disabilities
Assistive Technology
●
Specialized Tools help people
interact
○ If
these tools allow someone to
use a system, then that system
is accessible
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Assistive Technology for
note taking
•
•
•
•
•
Braillewriter
Braille notetakers
Voice Device
Keyboard
Memos
Accessibility and the Law
● What does
○
it mean to be accessible?
People with disabilities can perform the same
functions, receive the same information, and
participate as both a consumer and a producer
Judith Heumann
Special Advisor on Disability Rights for the US State Department under President Obama, former Assistant Secretary of the
Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services, U.S. Department of Education
"For people without disabilities, technology makes
things convenient, whereas for people with
disabilities, it makes things possible . . . [this] fact
brings with it an enormous responsibility because
the reverse is also true. Inaccessible technology can
make things absolutely impossible for disabled
people, a prospect we must avoid."
Timeline
● Fall 2009:
○
Develop strategy for web accessibility
Comply with WCAG 2.0 Level AA
● June
2010 – Launch new Cancer.org
Testing: IW & ACS use Firefox Total Validator open source tool
○ Consulting: Knowbility perform manual and automated
assessment
○
● August
○
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2010 - Feb 2011: Additional Changes
Additional changes to fix bugs found by Knowbility, including
color contrast, keyboard access and readability
Examples of Accessibility Issues
1.
Lack of Alt Text on Images
2.
Heading elements not ordered properly
3.
Color Contrasts
4.
PDFs not readable by screenreader
5.
Keyboard access does not work on drop down menus
6.
Focus order is illogical
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Steps to Ensure Accessibility
● UCM
○
Standards
Added rules within UCM guidelines to ensure accessibility for
alternate text and readability
● Announce
● JAWS
○
licenses (3) purchased
Utilized for new development and any changes
● Updated
○
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Web Accessible on cancer.org
contract templates
Clause must meet WCAG 2.0 Level AA
What we still need…
● Immediate
Customized, actionable playbook to ensure we develop code
that meet accessibility standards up front
○ Specific Instructions on how to test
○ Training:
○ Developers
○ Fix existing bugs
○ Develop correctly from the beginning
○ Managers/Business Owners
○ What does it mean to be accessible
○ How to talk to vendors about requirements
○
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What we still need…
● Long
Term
Ad Hoc Consulting, if necessary
○ Best practices/tools/testing
○
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Possible Consulting Partner
● Possible
proposal
○ Checklist adoption/customization
○ Training for managers, developers,
○ Pilots of various tools
○ HTML compliance checker
○ Eclipse AcTF aDesigner
● Partner to
vendors
help American Cancer Society integrate
accessibility more seamlessly into it practice
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