Title: Accessibility and
1Accessibility and
- Practical Solutions
- Stacy Smith
- Adaptive Technology Specialist
- Disability Support Services, K-State
2What is meant by Accessibility?
3Accessibility defined
- A term used to describe the relative ease or
difficulty in reaching a waterfall. - --www.world-waterfalls.com/glossary.php
4Accessibility defined
- In the age of information technology,
accessibility refers to the possibility for
everyone, regardless of physical or technological
readiness, such as people with disabilities, to
access and use technology and information
products.
-- www.remedy.com/customers/dev_communi
ty/UserExperience/glossary.htm
5Why consider accessibility?
- Federal Law mandates equal access to
education, employment, communication, technology,
and other resources for persons with disabilities.
6Disability law
- Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990
- Prohibits discrimination on the basis of
disability - Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act Amendments
of 1973 - Ensures that Federally funded institutions such
as Universities provide equal access to students
with disabilities - Section 508 of the the Rehabilitation Act
Amendments of 1998 - Requires electronic and information technology to
be accessible to persons with disabilities
7Legal conclusions for education
- Universities must provide equal access to
educational opportunities for otherwise qualified
students. - An otherwise qualified student meets the
academic and technical standards requisite to
admission or participation. - The experience for persons with disabilities must
be equivalent to that of other participants
8The bottom line
- Accessibility is the right thing to do.
- Increasing enrollment of students with
disabilities. - Entities that accept Federal funds must meet
Federal regulations. - All States accept Federal funding.
9What has to be accessible?
- Course management software
- Web pages that support the course
- Course content such as presentations, documents,
pdfs, graphics, images, video, etc.
10Providing accessible content . . .
11The good news
- Axio is quite accessible
- Navigation
- Email and message boards
- Variety of file types supported
- Does not mean that every Axio feature is
accessible! - Axio team interested in accessibility
- Request feedback, program that, repeat
- Variety of tools already exist
- Most of you arent responsible for LMS development
12The bad news?
- Cant use all these cool tools?
- My course has to be boring and plain?
- This will take a lot of work and effort?
- The university has to spend lots of ?
13The bad news?
- Cant use all these cool tools?
- My course has to be boring and plain?
- This will take a lot of work and effort?
- The university has to spend lots of ?
14Use what you want . . .
- . . . But plan for accessibility. Considering
accessibility in delivering eLearning hinges on
preparation. What have you done, as an
instructor, to prepare for the eventuality of a
student with a disability enrolling in your
course?
15Learn about the end user
- How do students with disabilities interact with
- The WWW?
- Turn off images
- Tab through web pages
- Download free reader software
- Common file types/components?
- Try built-in text-to speech
- Bandage your fingers and participate in
text-based chat - Close your eyes and listen to a visual lecture
with visual aids
16Resources
- ReadPlease www.readplease.com
- Mozilla FireFox http//www.mozilla.com/en-US/fire
fox/ - Developers Toolkit extension
- FireVox extension
- Speech-to-text built into MicroSoft Office, Apple
OS - Text-to-speech built into MicroSoft Office, Adobe
Acrobat (full version)
17Start planning. Plan. Plan some more.
- The Office of Civil Rights states that
accommodations should be planned for at the
beginning of course development, rather than on
an ad-hoc basis once the student enrolls - Planning saves time and money
- Planning provides a marketing advantage
- Disabled population is growing
- Accessible to handheld devices
18Learn the standards
- As administrators/instructors, you have two main
areas of concern - Web design and delivery
- World Wide Web Consortium (www.w3.org)
- Federal Government (www.section508.gov and
www.access-board.gov) - WebAIM (Web Accessibility in Mind
www.webaim.org) - Course content
- WebAIM (see above)
- Vendor sites (Adobe, MicroSoft, etc)
19Apply principles of Universal Design
- Universal Design is the design of products and
environments to be usable by all people, to the
greatest extent possible, without the need for
adaptation or specialized design.
20Seven principles of Universal Design
21One Equitable Use
- The design is useful and marketable to people
with diverse abilities
22Two Flexibility in Use
- The design accommodates a wide range of
individual preferences and abilities.
23Three Simple and Intuitive
- The use of the design is easy to understand,
regardless of the users experience, knowledge,
language skills, or current concentration level. - (see next slide for example)
24Google Simple and Intuitive
25Four Perceptible Information
- The design communicates necessary information
effectively to the user, regardless of ambient
conditions or the users sensory abilities.
26Five Tolerance for Error
- The design minimizes hazards and the adverse
consequences of accidental or unintended actions.
27Six Low Physical Effort
- The design can be used efficiently and
comfortably and with a minimum of fatigue.
28Seven Size and Space for Approach and Use
- Appropriate size and space is provided for
approach, reach, manipulation, and use regardless
of users body size, posture, or mobility.
29Practical application
301 Accommodation
- Extended time on exams is the most common
accommodation. - Grant student a timed exception on Axio
31Online tests and screen readers
- Screen readers rely on
- Cues, such as periods and commas, to judge how
the text-to-speech should be paced - Solution? Use periods at the end of questions
- Code, to know what to read first, and how to
proceed from there - Use tables carefully. Avoid matching questions
if a student relies exclusively on a screen
reader.
321 Presentation method?
- PowerPoint
- Make good design choices
33Poor design choices
- Clutter things that dont convey necessary
meaning - Information overload too much information on
one page - Unnecessary conservation some people load their
slides with lots of text because they think
PowerPoint slides are expensive and they cant
use as many as theyd like. As a result the text
gets smaller and smaller and the slide looks like
its nothing but textunless youve been clever
like me and youve put cool images of Santa on
the page.
341 Presentation method?
- PowerPoint
- Make good design choices
- Ensure sufficient but not too much contrast
35My title is here
- My first bullet is here
- My second bullet is here
- My third bullet is here
- My fourth bullet is here
- My fifth bullet is here
- Arent rainbows pretty?
361 Presentation method?
- PowerPoint
- Make good design choices
- Ensure sufficient but not too much contrast
- Provide alternate text for images
- Saving PowerPoint
- Offer options two file formats preferable
- Saving as a .ppt file preserves students ability
to manipulate text size, contrast, etc IF they
have PowerPoint - Saving for the web is acceptable unless the
student relies on a screen reader
37Presentation solutions
- Illinois Accessible Web Publishing Wizard
- http//www.accessiblewizards.uiuc.edu/
- Avoid PowerPoint use HTML to create native
web-based presentations - Positives completely accessible
- Negatives have to create own file structure,
buttons, etc - Methods authoring software (DreamWeaver, etc),
hard code, CSS and templates
38Simple accommodations benefit many
- Creating a video? Script it.
- Your presentation will be better
- Record without an audience. No dead space during
questions fewer ums and ahs - Transcript becomes a natural by-product
- Scanning documents?
- Make sure to use Optical Character Recognition
(OCR) to convert images into text. - Using images, graphs, charts?
- Provide alternate text, whether its a word
processing file, web page, .pdf, PowerPoint, etc
39I cant plan for everythingcan I?
- Include a statement in your syllabus encouraging
students with disabilities to disclose - Exercise your flexibility and creativity
- Offer alternative assignments if necessary
- Rely on the expertise of others
40Accessible design benefits everyone
- Students with disabilities
- Students with undocumented disabilities
- Students with different learning styles
- Non-native speakers (ESL)
- People using older, slower technology
- People using the smaller, portable technology
- Benefits instructors, too!
41Instructors benefit . . .
- Well-organized, clean, and flexible courses
- Improved student participation and feedback
- Increased retention of students
- Favorable student evaluations
42When students and instructors are happy . . .
. . . Everyone wins.
43Questions?