SlideShare une entreprise Scribd logo
1  sur  89
1
Accessibility basics:
A library for everyone
Whitney Quesenbery
Center for Civic Design
@awebforeveryone | @whitneyq | @civicdesign
Designing for Digital 2017
2
Hello!
Me
Civic design
User research, accessibility, plain language
Storytelling
Former theatre designer
You?
3
Make digital library services for everyone
Starting from principles
• Accessible UX
• People first
Building blocks of accessibility
• Structure
• Plain language
• Tables and forms
• Images and media
Laws and other regulations
• ADA, Section 508, CVAA
• UN Convention
Making it happen
• Creating a process
Principles
And a few definitions
5
Which of
these are for
people with
disabilities?
Disability
the outcome of the interaction
between a person ... and the
environment and attitudinal barriers
they may face
International Classification of Functioning (ICF),
World Health Organization
Usability
The effectiveness, efficiency and
satisfaction with which a specified
set of users can achieve a
specified set of tasks in a particular
environment.
ISO 9241-11
Accessibility
The usability of a product,
service, environment or facility
by people with the widest range
of capabilities.
ISO 9241-20
Plain language means users can
find what they need
understand what they find
use the information
to meet their goals
This definition was written by Ginny Redish and adopted by international plain language
organizations
Many barriers to cognitive accessibility
are the same as usability problems for
general audience…but more severe.
- Clayton Lewis
The POUR Principles
Perceivable
Operable
Understandable
Robust
12
What if we think about
accessibility as user experience?
Not rules, but thoughtful design
Not disability, but experience
Not tech, but people
13
Principles of Accessible UX
1. People first: designing for differences
2. Clear purpose: well designed goals
3. Solid structure: built to standards
4. Easy interaction: everything works
5. Helpful wayfinding: guides users
6. Clean presentation: supports meaning
7. Plain language: creates conversation
8. Accessible media: supports all senses
9. Universal usability: creates delight
People First
We can’t design for people we don’t know
15
People First
Designing for differences
People are the first consideration, and sites are designed with the
needs of everyone in the audience in mind.
15
Steven
• Graduated from the Art
Institute
• Graphic artist in a small
ad agency
• iPad, iPhone, MacBook
Pro, super monitor
Jacob
• College graduate,
legal training courses
• Paralegal, writes case
summaries
• Shares an apartment
with a friend
• Laptop, iPhone
Emily
• Graduated from high
school and working on
a college degree
• Lives in a loft with a
group of friends
• Works part-time at a
local community center
16
Accessible UX Personas
Meeting all kinds of people
Carol
Jacob
Lea
Emily Steven
Maria
Trevor
Vishnu
17
I like consistent, familiar
places on the web
Ability: Autism Spectrum Disorder.
Uses larger text and a program that hides
everything but the text, so he doesn’t get
distracted
Aptitude: Uses the computer well for
games, but doesn’t learn new sites easily
Attitude: Prefers familiar sites in an
established routine
Assistive Technology: Text preference
settings, power keyboard user.
Trevor
• 18 years old
• Lives with family
• Goes to secondary
school
• Computers at school;
laptop at home; basic
mobile phone with
SMS
18
Emily
I want to do everything
for myself
Ability: Cerebral palsy. Difficult to use
hands and has some difficulty speaking
clearly; uses a motorized wheel chair
Aptitude: Uses the computer well, with the
right input device; good at finding efficient
search terms
Attitude: Wants to do everything for
herself; can be impatient
Assistive Technology: Communicator
(AAC) with speech generator, iPad, power
wheelchair
• 24 years old
• Graduated from high
school and working on a
college degree
• Lives in an independent
living facility
• Works part-time at a
local community center
19
Jacob
The right technology
lets me do anything.
Ability: Blind since birth with
some light perception
Aptitude: Skilled technology user
Attitude: Digital native, early
adopter, persists until he gets it
Assistive Technology: Screen
reader, audio note-taker, Braille
display
• 32 years old
• College graduate, legal
training courses
• Shares an apartment with a
friend
• Paralegal, reviews cases and
writes case summaries
• Laptop, braille display, iPhone
20
Lea
No one gets that this
really is a disability.
Ability: Fatigue from fibromyalgia,
trackball, and special keyboard
Aptitude: Average user
Attitude: Wishes people would
understand how hard it can be for
her to make it through the day
Assistive Technology: Split
keyboard, power keyboard user,
Dragon Naturally Speaking
• 35 years old
• Masters degree
• Writes for a trade
publication; works
from home
21
Steven
My only disability is that
everyone doesn't sign.
Ability: Native language is ASL; can
speak and read lips; uses SMS/IM,
Skype, and video chat
Aptitude: Good with graphic tools, and
prefers visuals to text; poor spelling
makes searching more difficult
Attitude: Can be annoyed about
accessibility, like lack of captions
Assistive Technology: Sign language,
CART, captions, video chat
• 38 years old
• Art school
• Graphic artist in a small
ad agency
• iPad, iPhone, MacBook
Pro; good computer at
work
22
Vishnu
I want to be on the same
level as everyone else.
Ability: Speaks three languages:
Gujarati, Hindi, English, and a little
spoken Mandarin. Uses contrast
adjustment to see the screen clearly
Aptitude: Expert user of technical tools;
frustrated searching across languages
Attitude: Sees himself as a world
citizen, and wants to be able to use any
site
Assistive Technology: Contrast
adjustments, screen magnification,
personalized stylesheets
• 48 years old
• Engineering degree
• Works for a medical software
company on int’l projects
• Born in India, graduate school
in Malaysia, lives in Singapore
• High tech all the way at work;
two mobile phones and a
personal laptop
23
Maria
I love this. It's all here...when
I can find it.
Ability: Prefers Spanish language sites,
when she can find them; needs
information and instructions written clearly
Aptitude: Adventurous, but not very
proficient; husband and daughter set up
bookmarks for her
Attitude: Thinks it’s wonderful to be able
to have her favorite websites with her at all
times
Assistive Technology: Skype, online
translation sites
• 49 years old
• Community college +
healthcare certificate
• Married, grown children
• Spanish – English bilingual
• Community health worker
• Smartphone from her phone
service, computer primarily
her husband’s, for his work
24
Carol
My grandkids are dragging me
into the world of technology.
Ability: First signs of macular
degeneration, mild arthritis; hearing aid; no
special AT on computer
Aptitude: Used computers when she
worked as a bookkeeper, but now her
grandkids keep her old home computer
updated
Attitude: Willing, but not adventurous
Assistive Technology: Enlarges text, but
makes few other adjustments
• 74 years old
• Husband passed a year ago
• Lives in an apartment near
one of her daughters, and her
six grandkids (ages 6 to 16)
• Retired; worked 25 years as a
bookkeeper
• Older computer at home;
basic mobile phone
Get to know the personas
In groups of 4
Each choose a persona and introduce yourself:
What are your top needs and goals?
What barriers do you face?
Group input:
What can you add to understanding the personas?
How can we design to help them succeed?
Building blocks
Structure and semantic meaning
27
Solid structure
28
Solid structure starts with design
Design structure
• Clear layout design that
supports users through the
interaction or information
• Standards-based markup
• Design for linearization and
responsiveness
Code structure
• Standards-based markup
• HTML5 layout elements
• ARIA roles (used wisely)
You don’t have to know how to code, but you need to understand
how a web page or app is structured to design it well
29
Solid structure: Built to standards
Which one is accessible?
A big hat tip to @AccessibleJoe and all the folks working on making WordPress more
accessible, and to Sylvia Eggers, original author of the accessible child theme shown here.
30
Unfriendly
structure:
Find the
content!
31
Unfriendly structure:
Reading order
32
Friendly structure: Good wayfinding cues
33
Identify the areas of
a page visually and
in code
A clean presentation
is easier to navigate –
for everyone.
role = banner
role = main
role = contentinfo
role =
complementary
role = form
role =
navigation
role = navigation
role = search
34
Design for responsive as a step to accessibility
How might you simplify this page?
Identify the content structures and
what order they go in
Menus
Text
Headings
Containers
Lists
Images
Forms
Links
http://www.open.ac.uk/library/
37
Use tables (only) for tabular data
Don’t use tables for layout
 Use row and column
headings (coded correctly)
 Check that the table will
be intelligible if linearized.
 Do use “zebra stripes”
Two articles on zebra striping
http://alistapart.com/article/zebrastripingdoesithelp
http://alistapart.com/article/zebrastripingmoredataforthecase
38
Use headings correctly
The basics
One <H1> per page
The controversies
• Heading order
• Empty headings
• An <H1> in every <div>
• Headings that should really be
a link or paragraph style
<H1>The visible title of the page</H1>
<H2>A major section of the page</H2>
<H3>A subheading</H3>
<H3>A subheading</H3>
<H3>A subheading</H3>
<H2>A major section of the page</H2>
<H3>A subheading</H3>
<H3>A subheading</H3>
39
Support preferences for text size
Support text zoom with good wrapping. Don't let
text be cut off.
40
Easy interaction requires correct code
Designing interaction
• Start with a layout in a logical
order
• Design the flow of on-page
interaction so they work for
linear interaction
Coding interaction
• Use semantic elements in
HTML correctly
• Don’t rely on visual layout for
meaning
• Change the appearance with
CSS
An easy quick check for interaction: can you navigate the entire
page, app, or site only using a keyboard?
41
Buttons and links
Links are for navigation
To a new page
To a new view
To a different URL
To a place on a page
Buttons are for actions
Submit form data to a server
Reset a form
Open a window
Trigger a popup menu
Play media content
Both links and buttons can be styled with CSS, but for assistive
technology to understand them, they must be coded correctly
42
Elements of a form
Field
Label
Prompt
Validation
Errors
Submit button
43
Every form field needs a label
Visible labels on the screen
Labels in code for screen readers
Date of birth
<form>
<label for="dob">Date of birth</label>
<input type="text" id="dob" />
.....
</form>
44
Every field needs a label
(not inside the field)
<form>
<label for="monthField">Month</label>
<input type="text" id="monthField" />
<label for="dayField">Day</label>
<input type="text" id="dayField" />
<label for="yearField">Year</label>
<input type="text" id="yearField" />
</form>
Date of birth
Month Day Year
Date of birth
Month Day Year
45
Put warnings and prompts in the right order
Before the action or field, not after it!
What is your date of birth?
Month Day Year
For example: 12 28 1970
What is your date of birth?
Month Day Year
For example: 12 28 1970
See Caroline Jarrett's articles on forms and her discussion of the
placement of prompts at Forms That Work
46
Put error messages where they can be found
If the entry is checked as it is
entered, the message can go after
the field.
Otherwise, it should go before the
field.
If the page refreshes, messages
go at the top of the page.
47
Form patterns
USDS
standards.usa.gov/components/form-controls/
Coop
coop-design-manual.herokuapp.com/styles/forms
GDS
govuk-elements.herokuapp.com/form-elements/
Break
Content
Plain language and alternatives for media
51
WCAG 2.0 Guidelines for content accessibility
Text content
Level A and AA
2.4.4 & 2.4.9 Link Purpose:
2.4.6 & 2.4.10 Headings &Labels:
3.1.3 Unusual Words
Images
Level A
1.1 Text Alternatives:
1.4.1 Use of Color
1.3.3 Sensory Characteristics
1.1.1 & 1.4.9 Non-text Content
52Plain language
43% of adults in the US read
at basic or below basic levels
53
Use simple, everyday words
Description Of Service
The Site is an online community which enables photographers and graphic
artists to post photographs and images, share comments, opinions and
ideas, promote their work, participate in contests and promotions, and
access and/or purchase services from time to time made available on the
Site (“Services”). Services include, but are not limited to, any service and/or
content 500px makes available to or performs for you, as well as the
offering of any materials displayed, transmitted or performed on the Site or
through the Services. Content (“Content”) includes, but is not limited to
text, user comments, messages, information, data, graphics, news articles,
photographs, images, illustrations, and software.
54
Use summaries to communicate key points
55
Help readers orient themselves
(on the site, on the page, in the right order
1. Page title
2. Shortest possible
answer
3. Good headings
4. Bullets for key points
5. Good captions
56
Put warnings and prompts in the right order
Requirements, prompts, warnings, notes and anything
else that someone needs to complete an action
correctly must come before the action, field or
instruction, not after it!
57
Use design to make information easy to scan
58
Images and media: Appeal to all senses
People can understand and use information
contained in media, such as images, audio, video,
animation, and presentations.
• Duplicating cues (color + shape)
• Content replacement (audio + captions)
59
Color
The simplest rule:
Do not communicate meaning
only with color.
Color, shape, text all work
together to communicate
meaning.
60
Color
Make sure there is enough contrast
between text (or icons) and the
background.
There are tools for that!
• contrast-finder.tanagurconu.com
• colorsafe.co/
• webaim.org/resources/contrastchecker
lighthouse.org
61
Animations and video
Transcripts for all audio
Synchronized captions for video
Audio (or visual) descriptions for action
And, make sure the media player is accessible
62
Images
The most important
question:
What does this image
communicate?
4 Syllables - http://www.4syllables.com.au/2010/12/text-alternatives-decision-tree/
63
Images
What’s the right ALT
text for this image?
Fox
Red fox
A red fox, standing on a pile of
rocks, looking back at the camera
Red fox at Sachuest Point National
Wildlife Refuge
It depends on context!
64
Get the basics right
Repeat the text in
the image.
Alt text: “Webcast.
Applying 21st Century
Toxicology to Green
Chemical and Material
Design. September 20-
21, 2011”
Identify the link target
Alt text:
“UXPA group on Facebook”
"@UXPA_Int on Twitter"
"UXPA's LinkedIN profile"
Don’t create noise
Alt text: “”
Include both image and
text in one link
65
Don't hide meaningful images
Is a profile
photo part of
the content?
<img alt="Photo of Caroline">
or
<img alt="Caroline Jarrett">
66
On the HTML5 standards horizon:
<figure> and <figcaption>
Keeps the image, alt text, and caption together
<figure><img src="castle-
painting.jpg" alt="The castle
now has two towers and two
walls.">
<figcaption>Oil-based paint
on canvas. Eloisa Faulkner,
1756.</figcaption></figure>
Example from: http://rawgit.com/w3c/alt-techniques/master/index.html#m6
67
Make captions and alt text work together
The caption:
“Figure 1: The ABC of research methods”
The alt text:
“ABC diagram.”
or
"ABC diagram sketched on a
chalkboard.”
or
“A diagram sketched on a chalkboard as
a triangle. Top: Attitude. Right: Behavior.
Left: Comprehension.
68
Don't hide information in the alt text
Caption: Red fox, credit: John & Karen
Hollingsworth
Alt text: Red Fox as Sachuest Point NWR.
Credit J and K Hollingsworth
69
When the information
is in a chart...
Add a data table
The alt text:
"Bar chart of data in table below"
http://www.careerinfonet.org/finaidadvisor/earnings.aspx?nodeid=21
Laws
72
Americans with Disabilities Act
The ADA is one of America's most comprehensive pieces of civil rights
legislation that prohibits discrimination and guarantees that people
with disabilities have the same opportunities as everyone else to
participate in the mainstream of American life -- to enjoy employment
opportunities, to purchase goods and services, and to participate in
State and local government programs and services.
First passed in 1990
https://www.ada.gov/ada_intro.htm
73
UN Convention on the
Rights of Persons with Disabilities
Adopted in 2006
https://www.un.org/development/desa/disabilities/convention-on-the-
rights-of-persons-with-disabilities.html
74
Section 508
Section 508 covers all electronic and information technology used by
the Federal government that agencies develop, procure, maintain, or
use. Agencies must ensure that it is accessible to employees and
public.
First passed in 2001
Updated in 2017
https://www.section508.gov/
75
WAI Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 2.0
The WCAG documents explain how to make web content more
accessible to people with disabilities. Web "content" generally refers
to the information in a web page or web application
1.0 published in 1999
2.0 published in 2008
Work on 2.1 begun in 2017
https://www.w3.org/WAI/intro/wcag
76
Accessible UX   WCAG 2.0
On the A Web for Everyone book site, you can find resources
including a list of the accessible UX principles and a table that cross-
references the principles to guidelines and checkpoints in WCAG 2.0
http://rosenfeldmedia.com/books/a-web-for-everyone/#resources
Making it happen
Accessibility is a process
78
Work with clear purpose
People enjoy products that are designed for the
audience and guided by a defined purpose and
goals.
• Design for clarity and simplicity.
• Think “accessibility first.”
• Choose an accessibility strategy.
79
Start from a solid structure
People feel confident using the design because it
is stable, robust, and secure.
• Start from accessible templates
• Code to standards.
• Use standard web technologies
80
Accessible frameworks
https://standards.usa.gov/18f https://www.gov.uk/service-
manual/design/using-the-govuk-
template-frontend-toolkit-and-
elements
https://paypal.github.io/bootstrap-
accessibility-plugin/
https://make.wordpress.org/acces
sibility/
81
Accessibility testing in layers
Principle Testing mode What it tests
Perceivable Inspection Basic accessibility errors
Robust Code review Use of code standards
Semantic structure
Operable Check using AT
Expert review
Interaction using keyboard,
screen reader, other AT
Operable/
Understandable
Usability testing Use by real people
82
Accessibility is the work of everyone
To make something as simple as a heading...
• A UX researcher identifies user needs.
• An information architect suggests keywords.
• A content strategist plans the tone.
• A content author writes the text.
• A web producer tags it as a heading.
• A visual designer decides on its appearance.
• A web specialist creates the style.
• And the tech team makes sure the servers are running.
83
Be a leader
Support an integrated practice:
• Set policies and develop training.
• Choose content and development tools that
• support accessibility.
• Create a style guide and media library.
• Include people with disabilities.
• Make accessibility part of site maintenance.
84
Create an integrated practice
Make accessibility the way you do business.
Assess what’s needed for an integrated practice:
• Evaluate the current site.
• Identify ways to allocate resources.
• Identify opportunities to integrate accessibility into
• current processes.
• Assess current knowledge and readiness.
85
It takes....
... engaging all types of expertise
Photos: ITIF AVTI/CATEA
86
Be a ^ superhero
Create a new perspective
UX
87
It takes….
…changing your habits
Photo: mtstcil.org
88
It takes….
…a new perspective
Aimee Mullins TED talk
Be a superhero for accessible UX
Make change happen
Questions?
91
Whitney Quesenbery
whitneyq@civicdesign
civicdesign.org
@whitneyq
A Web for Everyone
rosenfeldmedia.com/books/a-web-for-everyone
@awebforeveryone
Center for Civic Design
civicdesign.org
@civicdesgin

Contenu connexe

Tendances

Accessible Design Presentation
Accessible Design PresentationAccessible Design Presentation
Accessible Design PresentationTopher Kanyuga
 
What is accessibility?
What is accessibility?What is accessibility?
What is accessibility?Russ Weakley
 
Basics of Web Accessibility
Basics of Web AccessibilityBasics of Web Accessibility
Basics of Web AccessibilityMoin Shaikh
 
Web accessibility
Web accessibilityWeb accessibility
Web accessibilityAGILEDROP
 
Web Accessibility: A Shared Responsibility
Web Accessibility: A Shared ResponsibilityWeb Accessibility: A Shared Responsibility
Web Accessibility: A Shared ResponsibilityJoseph Dolson
 
Understanding Web Accessibility
Understanding Web AccessibilityUnderstanding Web Accessibility
Understanding Web AccessibilityAndrea Dubravsky
 
ADA Compliance and Website Accessibility
ADA Compliance and Website AccessibilityADA Compliance and Website Accessibility
ADA Compliance and Website AccessibilitySilverTech
 
Accessibility Testing 101
Accessibility Testing 101Accessibility Testing 101
Accessibility Testing 101Patrick Dunphy
 
Accessible UX: Beyond the checklist to great experiences
Accessible UX: Beyond the checklist to great experiencesAccessible UX: Beyond the checklist to great experiences
Accessible UX: Beyond the checklist to great experiencesWhitney Quesenbery
 
Inclusive Design 101
Inclusive Design 101Inclusive Design 101
Inclusive Design 101Amanda Reagan
 
Web accessibility 101: The why, who, what, and how of "a11y"
Web accessibility 101: The why, who, what, and how of "a11y"Web accessibility 101: The why, who, what, and how of "a11y"
Web accessibility 101: The why, who, what, and how of "a11y"ecentricarts
 
UX and Accessibility
UX and Accessibility UX and Accessibility
UX and Accessibility Frank Cervone
 
Design for accessibility
Design for accessibilityDesign for accessibility
Design for accessibilityYogeshDaphane
 
Ui ux designing principles
Ui ux designing principlesUi ux designing principles
Ui ux designing principlesDzung Nguyen
 

Tendances (20)

Accessible Design Presentation
Accessible Design PresentationAccessible Design Presentation
Accessible Design Presentation
 
What is accessibility?
What is accessibility?What is accessibility?
What is accessibility?
 
Basics of Web Accessibility
Basics of Web AccessibilityBasics of Web Accessibility
Basics of Web Accessibility
 
Web accessibility
Web accessibilityWeb accessibility
Web accessibility
 
Web Accessibility: A Shared Responsibility
Web Accessibility: A Shared ResponsibilityWeb Accessibility: A Shared Responsibility
Web Accessibility: A Shared Responsibility
 
Understanding Web Accessibility
Understanding Web AccessibilityUnderstanding Web Accessibility
Understanding Web Accessibility
 
ADA Compliance and Website Accessibility
ADA Compliance and Website AccessibilityADA Compliance and Website Accessibility
ADA Compliance and Website Accessibility
 
Web Accessibility
Web AccessibilityWeb Accessibility
Web Accessibility
 
Accessibility Testing 101
Accessibility Testing 101Accessibility Testing 101
Accessibility Testing 101
 
Accessible UX: Beyond the checklist to great experiences
Accessible UX: Beyond the checklist to great experiencesAccessible UX: Beyond the checklist to great experiences
Accessible UX: Beyond the checklist to great experiences
 
Accessibility
AccessibilityAccessibility
Accessibility
 
Inclusive Design 101
Inclusive Design 101Inclusive Design 101
Inclusive Design 101
 
Web accessibility 101: The why, who, what, and how of "a11y"
Web accessibility 101: The why, who, what, and how of "a11y"Web accessibility 101: The why, who, what, and how of "a11y"
Web accessibility 101: The why, who, what, and how of "a11y"
 
UX and Accessibility
UX and Accessibility UX and Accessibility
UX and Accessibility
 
Web Accessibility
Web AccessibilityWeb Accessibility
Web Accessibility
 
WCAG
WCAGWCAG
WCAG
 
Design for accessibility
Design for accessibilityDesign for accessibility
Design for accessibility
 
Writing Great Alt Text
Writing Great Alt TextWriting Great Alt Text
Writing Great Alt Text
 
Web content accessibility
Web content accessibilityWeb content accessibility
Web content accessibility
 
Ui ux designing principles
Ui ux designing principlesUi ux designing principles
Ui ux designing principles
 

Similaire à Accessibility Basics

Designing for People
Designing for PeopleDesigning for People
Designing for PeopleSarah Horton
 
Mobile learning hv 11613
Mobile learning hv 11613Mobile learning hv 11613
Mobile learning hv 11613Nell Eckersley
 
Using technology to enhance classroom learning
Using technology to enhance classroom learningUsing technology to enhance classroom learning
Using technology to enhance classroom learningAmy Pyke
 
Technology of Peace - Child builds computer, computer grows with child
Technology of Peace - Child builds computer, computer grows with childTechnology of Peace - Child builds computer, computer grows with child
Technology of Peace - Child builds computer, computer grows with childPhilippe Scheimann
 
eLearning and Networking Technologies to Mimic the In-Person Experience
eLearning and Networking Technologies to Mimic the In-Person ExperienceeLearning and Networking Technologies to Mimic the In-Person Experience
eLearning and Networking Technologies to Mimic the In-Person Experiencejanetkrenn
 
Digital Citizenship - First Steps
Digital Citizenship - First StepsDigital Citizenship - First Steps
Digital Citizenship - First StepsAndrew Cowie
 
ESRL New Media in Storytime Workshop
ESRL New Media in Storytime WorkshopESRL New Media in Storytime Workshop
ESRL New Media in Storytime WorkshopCen Campbell
 
Technology that enhances classroom learning
Technology that enhances classroom learningTechnology that enhances classroom learning
Technology that enhances classroom learningCarrie Davenport
 
Santa Fe ISD mobile learning
Santa Fe ISD mobile learningSanta Fe ISD mobile learning
Santa Fe ISD mobile learningruckera
 
Introduction to mobile accessibility, 2015
Introduction to mobile accessibility, 2015Introduction to mobile accessibility, 2015
Introduction to mobile accessibility, 2015Henny Swan
 
Nlp presentation
Nlp presentationNlp presentation
Nlp presentationSurya Sg
 
Using iPads with Adult Students
Using iPads with Adult StudentsUsing iPads with Adult Students
Using iPads with Adult StudentsNell Eckersley
 
Coil2012 torcivia calixv4
Coil2012 torcivia calixv4Coil2012 torcivia calixv4
Coil2012 torcivia calixv4LPCalix
 
Strategies to Support Communication in the Classroom
Strategies to Support Communication in the ClassroomStrategies to Support Communication in the Classroom
Strategies to Support Communication in the ClassroomSpectronics
 
Using Interaction Design Methods for Creating AR and VR Interfaces
Using Interaction Design Methods for Creating AR and VR InterfacesUsing Interaction Design Methods for Creating AR and VR Interfaces
Using Interaction Design Methods for Creating AR and VR InterfacesMark Billinghurst
 

Similaire à Accessibility Basics (20)

Personas for Accessible UX
Personas for Accessible UXPersonas for Accessible UX
Personas for Accessible UX
 
Designing for People
Designing for PeopleDesigning for People
Designing for People
 
Demystifying digital accessibility webinar
Demystifying digital accessibility webinarDemystifying digital accessibility webinar
Demystifying digital accessibility webinar
 
Mobile learning hv 11613
Mobile learning hv 11613Mobile learning hv 11613
Mobile learning hv 11613
 
Using technology to enhance classroom learning
Using technology to enhance classroom learningUsing technology to enhance classroom learning
Using technology to enhance classroom learning
 
Technology of Peace - Child builds computer, computer grows with child
Technology of Peace - Child builds computer, computer grows with childTechnology of Peace - Child builds computer, computer grows with child
Technology of Peace - Child builds computer, computer grows with child
 
eLearning and Networking Technologies to Mimic the In-Person Experience
eLearning and Networking Technologies to Mimic the In-Person ExperienceeLearning and Networking Technologies to Mimic the In-Person Experience
eLearning and Networking Technologies to Mimic the In-Person Experience
 
Digital Citizenship - First Steps
Digital Citizenship - First StepsDigital Citizenship - First Steps
Digital Citizenship - First Steps
 
ESRL New Media in Storytime Workshop
ESRL New Media in Storytime WorkshopESRL New Media in Storytime Workshop
ESRL New Media in Storytime Workshop
 
Byod3
Byod3Byod3
Byod3
 
Technology that enhances classroom learning
Technology that enhances classroom learningTechnology that enhances classroom learning
Technology that enhances classroom learning
 
Santa Fe ISD mobile learning
Santa Fe ISD mobile learningSanta Fe ISD mobile learning
Santa Fe ISD mobile learning
 
Introduction to mobile accessibility, 2015
Introduction to mobile accessibility, 2015Introduction to mobile accessibility, 2015
Introduction to mobile accessibility, 2015
 
Nlp presentation
Nlp presentationNlp presentation
Nlp presentation
 
Using iPads with Adult Students
Using iPads with Adult StudentsUsing iPads with Adult Students
Using iPads with Adult Students
 
Bitacora personas
Bitacora personasBitacora personas
Bitacora personas
 
Coil2012 torcivia calixv4
Coil2012 torcivia calixv4Coil2012 torcivia calixv4
Coil2012 torcivia calixv4
 
Strategies to Support Communication in the Classroom
Strategies to Support Communication in the ClassroomStrategies to Support Communication in the Classroom
Strategies to Support Communication in the Classroom
 
Session 1
Session 1Session 1
Session 1
 
Using Interaction Design Methods for Creating AR and VR Interfaces
Using Interaction Design Methods for Creating AR and VR InterfacesUsing Interaction Design Methods for Creating AR and VR Interfaces
Using Interaction Design Methods for Creating AR and VR Interfaces
 

Plus de Whitney Quesenbery

Designing for difference: Are you failing at the most important design challenge
Designing for difference: Are you failing at the most important design challengeDesigning for difference: Are you failing at the most important design challenge
Designing for difference: Are you failing at the most important design challengeWhitney Quesenbery
 
Storytelling: Finding the insights in research data
Storytelling: Finding the insights in research data Storytelling: Finding the insights in research data
Storytelling: Finding the insights in research data Whitney Quesenbery
 
Storytelling makes research data come to life
Storytelling makes research data come to lifeStorytelling makes research data come to life
Storytelling makes research data come to lifeWhitney Quesenbery
 
From barrier-free to delightful
From barrier-free to delightfulFrom barrier-free to delightful
From barrier-free to delightfulWhitney Quesenbery
 
Plain language is accessibility for content
Plain language is accessibility for contentPlain language is accessibility for content
Plain language is accessibility for contentWhitney Quesenbery
 
From barrier-free to delightful
From barrier-free to delightfulFrom barrier-free to delightful
From barrier-free to delightfulWhitney Quesenbery
 
Usability testing for accessible UX
Usability testing for accessible UXUsability testing for accessible UX
Usability testing for accessible UXWhitney Quesenbery
 
Usability Testing: Making it fast, good, and cheap
Usability Testing: Making it fast, good, and cheapUsability Testing: Making it fast, good, and cheap
Usability Testing: Making it fast, good, and cheapWhitney Quesenbery
 
Security insights & issues for poll workers
Security insights & issues for poll workersSecurity insights & issues for poll workers
Security insights & issues for poll workersWhitney Quesenbery
 
Plain language (accessibility for content)
Plain language (accessibility for content)Plain language (accessibility for content)
Plain language (accessibility for content)Whitney Quesenbery
 
The power of stories: creating empathy and connection
The power of stories: creating empathy and connectionThe power of stories: creating empathy and connection
The power of stories: creating empathy and connectionWhitney Quesenbery
 
What you can learn from usability testing
What you can learn from usability testingWhat you can learn from usability testing
What you can learn from usability testingWhitney Quesenbery
 
Accessibility as Innovation: Creating accessible user experiences
Accessibility as Innovation: Creating accessible user experiencesAccessibility as Innovation: Creating accessible user experiences
Accessibility as Innovation: Creating accessible user experiencesWhitney Quesenbery
 
Using Personas and Stories Effectively - Workshop for TriUXPA
Using Personas and Stories Effectively - Workshop for TriUXPAUsing Personas and Stories Effectively - Workshop for TriUXPA
Using Personas and Stories Effectively - Workshop for TriUXPAWhitney Quesenbery
 
Persona Stories: Weaving together quant & qual for a richer picture
Persona Stories: Weaving together quant & qual for a richer picturePersona Stories: Weaving together quant & qual for a richer picture
Persona Stories: Weaving together quant & qual for a richer pictureWhitney Quesenbery
 

Plus de Whitney Quesenbery (20)

Designing for difference: Are you failing at the most important design challenge
Designing for difference: Are you failing at the most important design challengeDesigning for difference: Are you failing at the most important design challenge
Designing for difference: Are you failing at the most important design challenge
 
Storytelling: Finding the insights in research data
Storytelling: Finding the insights in research data Storytelling: Finding the insights in research data
Storytelling: Finding the insights in research data
 
Storytelling makes research data come to life
Storytelling makes research data come to lifeStorytelling makes research data come to life
Storytelling makes research data come to life
 
From barrier-free to delightful
From barrier-free to delightfulFrom barrier-free to delightful
From barrier-free to delightful
 
Plain language is accessibility for content
Plain language is accessibility for contentPlain language is accessibility for content
Plain language is accessibility for content
 
From barrier-free to delightful
From barrier-free to delightfulFrom barrier-free to delightful
From barrier-free to delightful
 
Usability testing for accessible UX
Usability testing for accessible UXUsability testing for accessible UX
Usability testing for accessible UX
 
Accessibility as innovation
Accessibility as innovationAccessibility as innovation
Accessibility as innovation
 
Usability Testing: Making it fast, good, and cheap
Usability Testing: Making it fast, good, and cheapUsability Testing: Making it fast, good, and cheap
Usability Testing: Making it fast, good, and cheap
 
Security insights & issues for poll workers
Security insights & issues for poll workersSecurity insights & issues for poll workers
Security insights & issues for poll workers
 
Writing Great Alt Text
Writing Great Alt TextWriting Great Alt Text
Writing Great Alt Text
 
Don't Make Me Read
Don't Make Me ReadDon't Make Me Read
Don't Make Me Read
 
Plain language (accessibility for content)
Plain language (accessibility for content)Plain language (accessibility for content)
Plain language (accessibility for content)
 
The power of stories: creating empathy and connection
The power of stories: creating empathy and connectionThe power of stories: creating empathy and connection
The power of stories: creating empathy and connection
 
What you can learn from usability testing
What you can learn from usability testingWhat you can learn from usability testing
What you can learn from usability testing
 
Accessibility as Innovation: Creating accessible user experiences
Accessibility as Innovation: Creating accessible user experiencesAccessibility as Innovation: Creating accessible user experiences
Accessibility as Innovation: Creating accessible user experiences
 
Usability meets accessibility
Usability meets accessibilityUsability meets accessibility
Usability meets accessibility
 
Using Personas and Stories Effectively - Workshop for TriUXPA
Using Personas and Stories Effectively - Workshop for TriUXPAUsing Personas and Stories Effectively - Workshop for TriUXPA
Using Personas and Stories Effectively - Workshop for TriUXPA
 
Persona Stories: Weaving together quant & qual for a richer picture
Persona Stories: Weaving together quant & qual for a richer picturePersona Stories: Weaving together quant & qual for a richer picture
Persona Stories: Weaving together quant & qual for a richer picture
 
Notetaking workshop
Notetaking workshopNotetaking workshop
Notetaking workshop
 

Dernier

Top Rated Pune Call Girls Saswad ⟟ 6297143586 ⟟ Call Me For Genuine Sex Serv...
Top Rated  Pune Call Girls Saswad ⟟ 6297143586 ⟟ Call Me For Genuine Sex Serv...Top Rated  Pune Call Girls Saswad ⟟ 6297143586 ⟟ Call Me For Genuine Sex Serv...
Top Rated Pune Call Girls Saswad ⟟ 6297143586 ⟟ Call Me For Genuine Sex Serv...Call Girls in Nagpur High Profile
 
Nepali Escort Girl Gomti Nagar \ 9548273370 Indian Call Girls Service Lucknow...
Nepali Escort Girl Gomti Nagar \ 9548273370 Indian Call Girls Service Lucknow...Nepali Escort Girl Gomti Nagar \ 9548273370 Indian Call Girls Service Lucknow...
Nepali Escort Girl Gomti Nagar \ 9548273370 Indian Call Girls Service Lucknow...nagunakhan
 
Editorial design Magazine design project.pdf
Editorial design Magazine design project.pdfEditorial design Magazine design project.pdf
Editorial design Magazine design project.pdftbatkhuu1
 
Chapter 19_DDA_TOD Policy_First Draft 2012.pdf
Chapter 19_DDA_TOD Policy_First Draft 2012.pdfChapter 19_DDA_TOD Policy_First Draft 2012.pdf
Chapter 19_DDA_TOD Policy_First Draft 2012.pdfParomita Roy
 
DragonBall PowerPoint Template for demo.pptx
DragonBall PowerPoint Template for demo.pptxDragonBall PowerPoint Template for demo.pptx
DragonBall PowerPoint Template for demo.pptxmirandajeremy200221
 
Best VIP Call Girls Noida Sector 47 Call Me: 8448380779
Best VIP Call Girls Noida Sector 47 Call Me: 8448380779Best VIP Call Girls Noida Sector 47 Call Me: 8448380779
Best VIP Call Girls Noida Sector 47 Call Me: 8448380779Delhi Call girls
 
(AISHA) Ambegaon Khurd Call Girls Just Call 7001035870 [ Cash on Delivery ] P...
(AISHA) Ambegaon Khurd Call Girls Just Call 7001035870 [ Cash on Delivery ] P...(AISHA) Ambegaon Khurd Call Girls Just Call 7001035870 [ Cash on Delivery ] P...
(AISHA) Ambegaon Khurd Call Girls Just Call 7001035870 [ Cash on Delivery ] P...ranjana rawat
 
Recommendable # 971589162217 # philippine Young Call Girls in Dubai By Marina...
Recommendable # 971589162217 # philippine Young Call Girls in Dubai By Marina...Recommendable # 971589162217 # philippine Young Call Girls in Dubai By Marina...
Recommendable # 971589162217 # philippine Young Call Girls in Dubai By Marina...home
 
Fashion trends before and after covid.pptx
Fashion trends before and after covid.pptxFashion trends before and after covid.pptx
Fashion trends before and after covid.pptxVanshNarang19
 
Best VIP Call Girls Noida Sector 44 Call Me: 8448380779
Best VIP Call Girls Noida Sector 44 Call Me: 8448380779Best VIP Call Girls Noida Sector 44 Call Me: 8448380779
Best VIP Call Girls Noida Sector 44 Call Me: 8448380779Delhi Call girls
 
VIP Call Girl Amravati Aashi 8250192130 Independent Escort Service Amravati
VIP Call Girl Amravati Aashi 8250192130 Independent Escort Service AmravatiVIP Call Girl Amravati Aashi 8250192130 Independent Escort Service Amravati
VIP Call Girl Amravati Aashi 8250192130 Independent Escort Service AmravatiSuhani Kapoor
 
Punjabi Housewife Call Girls Service Gomti Nagar \ 9548273370 Indian Call Gir...
Punjabi Housewife Call Girls Service Gomti Nagar \ 9548273370 Indian Call Gir...Punjabi Housewife Call Girls Service Gomti Nagar \ 9548273370 Indian Call Gir...
Punjabi Housewife Call Girls Service Gomti Nagar \ 9548273370 Indian Call Gir...nagunakhan
 
VIP Kolkata Call Girl Gariahat 👉 8250192130 Available With Room
VIP Kolkata Call Girl Gariahat 👉 8250192130  Available With RoomVIP Kolkata Call Girl Gariahat 👉 8250192130  Available With Room
VIP Kolkata Call Girl Gariahat 👉 8250192130 Available With Roomdivyansh0kumar0
 
Design Inspiration for College by Slidesgo.pptx
Design Inspiration for College by Slidesgo.pptxDesign Inspiration for College by Slidesgo.pptx
Design Inspiration for College by Slidesgo.pptxTusharBahuguna2
 
VIP Call Girls Service Mehdipatnam Hyderabad Call +91-8250192130
VIP Call Girls Service Mehdipatnam Hyderabad Call +91-8250192130VIP Call Girls Service Mehdipatnam Hyderabad Call +91-8250192130
VIP Call Girls Service Mehdipatnam Hyderabad Call +91-8250192130Suhani Kapoor
 
The history of music videos a level presentation
The history of music videos a level presentationThe history of music videos a level presentation
The history of music videos a level presentationamedia6
 

Dernier (20)

Top Rated Pune Call Girls Saswad ⟟ 6297143586 ⟟ Call Me For Genuine Sex Serv...
Top Rated  Pune Call Girls Saswad ⟟ 6297143586 ⟟ Call Me For Genuine Sex Serv...Top Rated  Pune Call Girls Saswad ⟟ 6297143586 ⟟ Call Me For Genuine Sex Serv...
Top Rated Pune Call Girls Saswad ⟟ 6297143586 ⟟ Call Me For Genuine Sex Serv...
 
Nepali Escort Girl Gomti Nagar \ 9548273370 Indian Call Girls Service Lucknow...
Nepali Escort Girl Gomti Nagar \ 9548273370 Indian Call Girls Service Lucknow...Nepali Escort Girl Gomti Nagar \ 9548273370 Indian Call Girls Service Lucknow...
Nepali Escort Girl Gomti Nagar \ 9548273370 Indian Call Girls Service Lucknow...
 
Editorial design Magazine design project.pdf
Editorial design Magazine design project.pdfEditorial design Magazine design project.pdf
Editorial design Magazine design project.pdf
 
Chapter 19_DDA_TOD Policy_First Draft 2012.pdf
Chapter 19_DDA_TOD Policy_First Draft 2012.pdfChapter 19_DDA_TOD Policy_First Draft 2012.pdf
Chapter 19_DDA_TOD Policy_First Draft 2012.pdf
 
DragonBall PowerPoint Template for demo.pptx
DragonBall PowerPoint Template for demo.pptxDragonBall PowerPoint Template for demo.pptx
DragonBall PowerPoint Template for demo.pptx
 
Best VIP Call Girls Noida Sector 47 Call Me: 8448380779
Best VIP Call Girls Noida Sector 47 Call Me: 8448380779Best VIP Call Girls Noida Sector 47 Call Me: 8448380779
Best VIP Call Girls Noida Sector 47 Call Me: 8448380779
 
(AISHA) Ambegaon Khurd Call Girls Just Call 7001035870 [ Cash on Delivery ] P...
(AISHA) Ambegaon Khurd Call Girls Just Call 7001035870 [ Cash on Delivery ] P...(AISHA) Ambegaon Khurd Call Girls Just Call 7001035870 [ Cash on Delivery ] P...
(AISHA) Ambegaon Khurd Call Girls Just Call 7001035870 [ Cash on Delivery ] P...
 
young call girls in Vivek Vihar🔝 9953056974 🔝 Delhi escort Service
young call girls in Vivek Vihar🔝 9953056974 🔝 Delhi escort Serviceyoung call girls in Vivek Vihar🔝 9953056974 🔝 Delhi escort Service
young call girls in Vivek Vihar🔝 9953056974 🔝 Delhi escort Service
 
escort service sasti (*~Call Girls in Prasad Nagar Metro❤️9953056974
escort service sasti (*~Call Girls in Prasad Nagar Metro❤️9953056974escort service sasti (*~Call Girls in Prasad Nagar Metro❤️9953056974
escort service sasti (*~Call Girls in Prasad Nagar Metro❤️9953056974
 
Call Girls Service Mukherjee Nagar @9999965857 Delhi 🫦 No Advance VVIP 🍎 SER...
Call Girls Service Mukherjee Nagar @9999965857 Delhi 🫦 No Advance  VVIP 🍎 SER...Call Girls Service Mukherjee Nagar @9999965857 Delhi 🫦 No Advance  VVIP 🍎 SER...
Call Girls Service Mukherjee Nagar @9999965857 Delhi 🫦 No Advance VVIP 🍎 SER...
 
Recommendable # 971589162217 # philippine Young Call Girls in Dubai By Marina...
Recommendable # 971589162217 # philippine Young Call Girls in Dubai By Marina...Recommendable # 971589162217 # philippine Young Call Girls in Dubai By Marina...
Recommendable # 971589162217 # philippine Young Call Girls in Dubai By Marina...
 
B. Smith. (Architectural Portfolio.).pdf
B. Smith. (Architectural Portfolio.).pdfB. Smith. (Architectural Portfolio.).pdf
B. Smith. (Architectural Portfolio.).pdf
 
Fashion trends before and after covid.pptx
Fashion trends before and after covid.pptxFashion trends before and after covid.pptx
Fashion trends before and after covid.pptx
 
Best VIP Call Girls Noida Sector 44 Call Me: 8448380779
Best VIP Call Girls Noida Sector 44 Call Me: 8448380779Best VIP Call Girls Noida Sector 44 Call Me: 8448380779
Best VIP Call Girls Noida Sector 44 Call Me: 8448380779
 
VIP Call Girl Amravati Aashi 8250192130 Independent Escort Service Amravati
VIP Call Girl Amravati Aashi 8250192130 Independent Escort Service AmravatiVIP Call Girl Amravati Aashi 8250192130 Independent Escort Service Amravati
VIP Call Girl Amravati Aashi 8250192130 Independent Escort Service Amravati
 
Punjabi Housewife Call Girls Service Gomti Nagar \ 9548273370 Indian Call Gir...
Punjabi Housewife Call Girls Service Gomti Nagar \ 9548273370 Indian Call Gir...Punjabi Housewife Call Girls Service Gomti Nagar \ 9548273370 Indian Call Gir...
Punjabi Housewife Call Girls Service Gomti Nagar \ 9548273370 Indian Call Gir...
 
VIP Kolkata Call Girl Gariahat 👉 8250192130 Available With Room
VIP Kolkata Call Girl Gariahat 👉 8250192130  Available With RoomVIP Kolkata Call Girl Gariahat 👉 8250192130  Available With Room
VIP Kolkata Call Girl Gariahat 👉 8250192130 Available With Room
 
Design Inspiration for College by Slidesgo.pptx
Design Inspiration for College by Slidesgo.pptxDesign Inspiration for College by Slidesgo.pptx
Design Inspiration for College by Slidesgo.pptx
 
VIP Call Girls Service Mehdipatnam Hyderabad Call +91-8250192130
VIP Call Girls Service Mehdipatnam Hyderabad Call +91-8250192130VIP Call Girls Service Mehdipatnam Hyderabad Call +91-8250192130
VIP Call Girls Service Mehdipatnam Hyderabad Call +91-8250192130
 
The history of music videos a level presentation
The history of music videos a level presentationThe history of music videos a level presentation
The history of music videos a level presentation
 

Accessibility Basics

  • 1. 1 Accessibility basics: A library for everyone Whitney Quesenbery Center for Civic Design @awebforeveryone | @whitneyq | @civicdesign Designing for Digital 2017
  • 2. 2 Hello! Me Civic design User research, accessibility, plain language Storytelling Former theatre designer You?
  • 3. 3 Make digital library services for everyone Starting from principles • Accessible UX • People first Building blocks of accessibility • Structure • Plain language • Tables and forms • Images and media Laws and other regulations • ADA, Section 508, CVAA • UN Convention Making it happen • Creating a process
  • 4. Principles And a few definitions
  • 5. 5 Which of these are for people with disabilities?
  • 6. Disability the outcome of the interaction between a person ... and the environment and attitudinal barriers they may face International Classification of Functioning (ICF), World Health Organization
  • 7. Usability The effectiveness, efficiency and satisfaction with which a specified set of users can achieve a specified set of tasks in a particular environment. ISO 9241-11
  • 8. Accessibility The usability of a product, service, environment or facility by people with the widest range of capabilities. ISO 9241-20
  • 9. Plain language means users can find what they need understand what they find use the information to meet their goals This definition was written by Ginny Redish and adopted by international plain language organizations
  • 10. Many barriers to cognitive accessibility are the same as usability problems for general audience…but more severe. - Clayton Lewis
  • 12. 12 What if we think about accessibility as user experience? Not rules, but thoughtful design Not disability, but experience Not tech, but people
  • 13. 13 Principles of Accessible UX 1. People first: designing for differences 2. Clear purpose: well designed goals 3. Solid structure: built to standards 4. Easy interaction: everything works 5. Helpful wayfinding: guides users 6. Clean presentation: supports meaning 7. Plain language: creates conversation 8. Accessible media: supports all senses 9. Universal usability: creates delight
  • 14. People First We can’t design for people we don’t know
  • 15. 15 People First Designing for differences People are the first consideration, and sites are designed with the needs of everyone in the audience in mind. 15 Steven • Graduated from the Art Institute • Graphic artist in a small ad agency • iPad, iPhone, MacBook Pro, super monitor Jacob • College graduate, legal training courses • Paralegal, writes case summaries • Shares an apartment with a friend • Laptop, iPhone Emily • Graduated from high school and working on a college degree • Lives in a loft with a group of friends • Works part-time at a local community center
  • 16. 16 Accessible UX Personas Meeting all kinds of people Carol Jacob Lea Emily Steven Maria Trevor Vishnu
  • 17. 17 I like consistent, familiar places on the web Ability: Autism Spectrum Disorder. Uses larger text and a program that hides everything but the text, so he doesn’t get distracted Aptitude: Uses the computer well for games, but doesn’t learn new sites easily Attitude: Prefers familiar sites in an established routine Assistive Technology: Text preference settings, power keyboard user. Trevor • 18 years old • Lives with family • Goes to secondary school • Computers at school; laptop at home; basic mobile phone with SMS
  • 18. 18 Emily I want to do everything for myself Ability: Cerebral palsy. Difficult to use hands and has some difficulty speaking clearly; uses a motorized wheel chair Aptitude: Uses the computer well, with the right input device; good at finding efficient search terms Attitude: Wants to do everything for herself; can be impatient Assistive Technology: Communicator (AAC) with speech generator, iPad, power wheelchair • 24 years old • Graduated from high school and working on a college degree • Lives in an independent living facility • Works part-time at a local community center
  • 19. 19 Jacob The right technology lets me do anything. Ability: Blind since birth with some light perception Aptitude: Skilled technology user Attitude: Digital native, early adopter, persists until he gets it Assistive Technology: Screen reader, audio note-taker, Braille display • 32 years old • College graduate, legal training courses • Shares an apartment with a friend • Paralegal, reviews cases and writes case summaries • Laptop, braille display, iPhone
  • 20. 20 Lea No one gets that this really is a disability. Ability: Fatigue from fibromyalgia, trackball, and special keyboard Aptitude: Average user Attitude: Wishes people would understand how hard it can be for her to make it through the day Assistive Technology: Split keyboard, power keyboard user, Dragon Naturally Speaking • 35 years old • Masters degree • Writes for a trade publication; works from home
  • 21. 21 Steven My only disability is that everyone doesn't sign. Ability: Native language is ASL; can speak and read lips; uses SMS/IM, Skype, and video chat Aptitude: Good with graphic tools, and prefers visuals to text; poor spelling makes searching more difficult Attitude: Can be annoyed about accessibility, like lack of captions Assistive Technology: Sign language, CART, captions, video chat • 38 years old • Art school • Graphic artist in a small ad agency • iPad, iPhone, MacBook Pro; good computer at work
  • 22. 22 Vishnu I want to be on the same level as everyone else. Ability: Speaks three languages: Gujarati, Hindi, English, and a little spoken Mandarin. Uses contrast adjustment to see the screen clearly Aptitude: Expert user of technical tools; frustrated searching across languages Attitude: Sees himself as a world citizen, and wants to be able to use any site Assistive Technology: Contrast adjustments, screen magnification, personalized stylesheets • 48 years old • Engineering degree • Works for a medical software company on int’l projects • Born in India, graduate school in Malaysia, lives in Singapore • High tech all the way at work; two mobile phones and a personal laptop
  • 23. 23 Maria I love this. It's all here...when I can find it. Ability: Prefers Spanish language sites, when she can find them; needs information and instructions written clearly Aptitude: Adventurous, but not very proficient; husband and daughter set up bookmarks for her Attitude: Thinks it’s wonderful to be able to have her favorite websites with her at all times Assistive Technology: Skype, online translation sites • 49 years old • Community college + healthcare certificate • Married, grown children • Spanish – English bilingual • Community health worker • Smartphone from her phone service, computer primarily her husband’s, for his work
  • 24. 24 Carol My grandkids are dragging me into the world of technology. Ability: First signs of macular degeneration, mild arthritis; hearing aid; no special AT on computer Aptitude: Used computers when she worked as a bookkeeper, but now her grandkids keep her old home computer updated Attitude: Willing, but not adventurous Assistive Technology: Enlarges text, but makes few other adjustments • 74 years old • Husband passed a year ago • Lives in an apartment near one of her daughters, and her six grandkids (ages 6 to 16) • Retired; worked 25 years as a bookkeeper • Older computer at home; basic mobile phone
  • 25. Get to know the personas In groups of 4 Each choose a persona and introduce yourself: What are your top needs and goals? What barriers do you face? Group input: What can you add to understanding the personas? How can we design to help them succeed?
  • 26. Building blocks Structure and semantic meaning
  • 28. 28 Solid structure starts with design Design structure • Clear layout design that supports users through the interaction or information • Standards-based markup • Design for linearization and responsiveness Code structure • Standards-based markup • HTML5 layout elements • ARIA roles (used wisely) You don’t have to know how to code, but you need to understand how a web page or app is structured to design it well
  • 29. 29 Solid structure: Built to standards Which one is accessible? A big hat tip to @AccessibleJoe and all the folks working on making WordPress more accessible, and to Sylvia Eggers, original author of the accessible child theme shown here.
  • 32. 32 Friendly structure: Good wayfinding cues
  • 33. 33 Identify the areas of a page visually and in code A clean presentation is easier to navigate – for everyone. role = banner role = main role = contentinfo role = complementary role = form role = navigation role = navigation role = search
  • 34. 34 Design for responsive as a step to accessibility
  • 35. How might you simplify this page?
  • 36. Identify the content structures and what order they go in Menus Text Headings Containers Lists Images Forms Links http://www.open.ac.uk/library/
  • 37. 37 Use tables (only) for tabular data Don’t use tables for layout  Use row and column headings (coded correctly)  Check that the table will be intelligible if linearized.  Do use “zebra stripes” Two articles on zebra striping http://alistapart.com/article/zebrastripingdoesithelp http://alistapart.com/article/zebrastripingmoredataforthecase
  • 38. 38 Use headings correctly The basics One <H1> per page The controversies • Heading order • Empty headings • An <H1> in every <div> • Headings that should really be a link or paragraph style <H1>The visible title of the page</H1> <H2>A major section of the page</H2> <H3>A subheading</H3> <H3>A subheading</H3> <H3>A subheading</H3> <H2>A major section of the page</H2> <H3>A subheading</H3> <H3>A subheading</H3>
  • 39. 39 Support preferences for text size Support text zoom with good wrapping. Don't let text be cut off.
  • 40. 40 Easy interaction requires correct code Designing interaction • Start with a layout in a logical order • Design the flow of on-page interaction so they work for linear interaction Coding interaction • Use semantic elements in HTML correctly • Don’t rely on visual layout for meaning • Change the appearance with CSS An easy quick check for interaction: can you navigate the entire page, app, or site only using a keyboard?
  • 41. 41 Buttons and links Links are for navigation To a new page To a new view To a different URL To a place on a page Buttons are for actions Submit form data to a server Reset a form Open a window Trigger a popup menu Play media content Both links and buttons can be styled with CSS, but for assistive technology to understand them, they must be coded correctly
  • 42. 42 Elements of a form Field Label Prompt Validation Errors Submit button
  • 43. 43 Every form field needs a label Visible labels on the screen Labels in code for screen readers Date of birth <form> <label for="dob">Date of birth</label> <input type="text" id="dob" /> ..... </form>
  • 44. 44 Every field needs a label (not inside the field) <form> <label for="monthField">Month</label> <input type="text" id="monthField" /> <label for="dayField">Day</label> <input type="text" id="dayField" /> <label for="yearField">Year</label> <input type="text" id="yearField" /> </form> Date of birth Month Day Year Date of birth Month Day Year
  • 45. 45 Put warnings and prompts in the right order Before the action or field, not after it! What is your date of birth? Month Day Year For example: 12 28 1970 What is your date of birth? Month Day Year For example: 12 28 1970 See Caroline Jarrett's articles on forms and her discussion of the placement of prompts at Forms That Work
  • 46. 46 Put error messages where they can be found If the entry is checked as it is entered, the message can go after the field. Otherwise, it should go before the field. If the page refreshes, messages go at the top of the page.
  • 48. Break
  • 49. Content Plain language and alternatives for media
  • 50. 51 WCAG 2.0 Guidelines for content accessibility Text content Level A and AA 2.4.4 & 2.4.9 Link Purpose: 2.4.6 & 2.4.10 Headings &Labels: 3.1.3 Unusual Words Images Level A 1.1 Text Alternatives: 1.4.1 Use of Color 1.3.3 Sensory Characteristics 1.1.1 & 1.4.9 Non-text Content
  • 51. 52Plain language 43% of adults in the US read at basic or below basic levels
  • 52. 53 Use simple, everyday words Description Of Service The Site is an online community which enables photographers and graphic artists to post photographs and images, share comments, opinions and ideas, promote their work, participate in contests and promotions, and access and/or purchase services from time to time made available on the Site (“Services”). Services include, but are not limited to, any service and/or content 500px makes available to or performs for you, as well as the offering of any materials displayed, transmitted or performed on the Site or through the Services. Content (“Content”) includes, but is not limited to text, user comments, messages, information, data, graphics, news articles, photographs, images, illustrations, and software.
  • 53. 54 Use summaries to communicate key points
  • 54. 55 Help readers orient themselves (on the site, on the page, in the right order 1. Page title 2. Shortest possible answer 3. Good headings 4. Bullets for key points 5. Good captions
  • 55. 56 Put warnings and prompts in the right order Requirements, prompts, warnings, notes and anything else that someone needs to complete an action correctly must come before the action, field or instruction, not after it!
  • 56. 57 Use design to make information easy to scan
  • 57. 58 Images and media: Appeal to all senses People can understand and use information contained in media, such as images, audio, video, animation, and presentations. • Duplicating cues (color + shape) • Content replacement (audio + captions)
  • 58. 59 Color The simplest rule: Do not communicate meaning only with color. Color, shape, text all work together to communicate meaning.
  • 59. 60 Color Make sure there is enough contrast between text (or icons) and the background. There are tools for that! • contrast-finder.tanagurconu.com • colorsafe.co/ • webaim.org/resources/contrastchecker lighthouse.org
  • 60. 61 Animations and video Transcripts for all audio Synchronized captions for video Audio (or visual) descriptions for action And, make sure the media player is accessible
  • 61. 62 Images The most important question: What does this image communicate? 4 Syllables - http://www.4syllables.com.au/2010/12/text-alternatives-decision-tree/
  • 62. 63 Images What’s the right ALT text for this image? Fox Red fox A red fox, standing on a pile of rocks, looking back at the camera Red fox at Sachuest Point National Wildlife Refuge It depends on context!
  • 63. 64 Get the basics right Repeat the text in the image. Alt text: “Webcast. Applying 21st Century Toxicology to Green Chemical and Material Design. September 20- 21, 2011” Identify the link target Alt text: “UXPA group on Facebook” "@UXPA_Int on Twitter" "UXPA's LinkedIN profile" Don’t create noise Alt text: “” Include both image and text in one link
  • 64. 65 Don't hide meaningful images Is a profile photo part of the content? <img alt="Photo of Caroline"> or <img alt="Caroline Jarrett">
  • 65. 66 On the HTML5 standards horizon: <figure> and <figcaption> Keeps the image, alt text, and caption together <figure><img src="castle- painting.jpg" alt="The castle now has two towers and two walls."> <figcaption>Oil-based paint on canvas. Eloisa Faulkner, 1756.</figcaption></figure> Example from: http://rawgit.com/w3c/alt-techniques/master/index.html#m6
  • 66. 67 Make captions and alt text work together The caption: “Figure 1: The ABC of research methods” The alt text: “ABC diagram.” or "ABC diagram sketched on a chalkboard.” or “A diagram sketched on a chalkboard as a triangle. Top: Attitude. Right: Behavior. Left: Comprehension.
  • 67. 68 Don't hide information in the alt text Caption: Red fox, credit: John & Karen Hollingsworth Alt text: Red Fox as Sachuest Point NWR. Credit J and K Hollingsworth
  • 68. 69 When the information is in a chart... Add a data table The alt text: "Bar chart of data in table below" http://www.careerinfonet.org/finaidadvisor/earnings.aspx?nodeid=21
  • 69. Laws
  • 70. 72 Americans with Disabilities Act The ADA is one of America's most comprehensive pieces of civil rights legislation that prohibits discrimination and guarantees that people with disabilities have the same opportunities as everyone else to participate in the mainstream of American life -- to enjoy employment opportunities, to purchase goods and services, and to participate in State and local government programs and services. First passed in 1990 https://www.ada.gov/ada_intro.htm
  • 71. 73 UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities Adopted in 2006 https://www.un.org/development/desa/disabilities/convention-on-the- rights-of-persons-with-disabilities.html
  • 72. 74 Section 508 Section 508 covers all electronic and information technology used by the Federal government that agencies develop, procure, maintain, or use. Agencies must ensure that it is accessible to employees and public. First passed in 2001 Updated in 2017 https://www.section508.gov/
  • 73. 75 WAI Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 2.0 The WCAG documents explain how to make web content more accessible to people with disabilities. Web "content" generally refers to the information in a web page or web application 1.0 published in 1999 2.0 published in 2008 Work on 2.1 begun in 2017 https://www.w3.org/WAI/intro/wcag
  • 74. 76 Accessible UX   WCAG 2.0 On the A Web for Everyone book site, you can find resources including a list of the accessible UX principles and a table that cross- references the principles to guidelines and checkpoints in WCAG 2.0 http://rosenfeldmedia.com/books/a-web-for-everyone/#resources
  • 76. 78 Work with clear purpose People enjoy products that are designed for the audience and guided by a defined purpose and goals. • Design for clarity and simplicity. • Think “accessibility first.” • Choose an accessibility strategy.
  • 77. 79 Start from a solid structure People feel confident using the design because it is stable, robust, and secure. • Start from accessible templates • Code to standards. • Use standard web technologies
  • 79. 81 Accessibility testing in layers Principle Testing mode What it tests Perceivable Inspection Basic accessibility errors Robust Code review Use of code standards Semantic structure Operable Check using AT Expert review Interaction using keyboard, screen reader, other AT Operable/ Understandable Usability testing Use by real people
  • 80. 82 Accessibility is the work of everyone To make something as simple as a heading... • A UX researcher identifies user needs. • An information architect suggests keywords. • A content strategist plans the tone. • A content author writes the text. • A web producer tags it as a heading. • A visual designer decides on its appearance. • A web specialist creates the style. • And the tech team makes sure the servers are running.
  • 81. 83 Be a leader Support an integrated practice: • Set policies and develop training. • Choose content and development tools that • support accessibility. • Create a style guide and media library. • Include people with disabilities. • Make accessibility part of site maintenance.
  • 82. 84 Create an integrated practice Make accessibility the way you do business. Assess what’s needed for an integrated practice: • Evaluate the current site. • Identify ways to allocate resources. • Identify opportunities to integrate accessibility into • current processes. • Assess current knowledge and readiness.
  • 83. 85 It takes.... ... engaging all types of expertise Photos: ITIF AVTI/CATEA
  • 84. 86 Be a ^ superhero Create a new perspective UX
  • 85. 87 It takes…. …changing your habits Photo: mtstcil.org
  • 86. 88 It takes…. …a new perspective Aimee Mullins TED talk
  • 87. Be a superhero for accessible UX Make change happen
  • 89. 91 Whitney Quesenbery whitneyq@civicdesign civicdesign.org @whitneyq A Web for Everyone rosenfeldmedia.com/books/a-web-for-everyone @awebforeveryone Center for Civic Design civicdesign.org @civicdesgin

Notes de l'éditeur

  1. All of the tools and principles of an excellent user experience also support accessibility, just as web design that is responsive to diversity of devices is also responsive to a diversity of human needs.  Today is about basics, not technology, but a way of thinking about how to design with clarity, good signposting of structure and function of info and elements, and building a conversation into the interface.
  2. Social model of disability. It's the interaction. That's what we create. So it make sense that accessibility is part of UX
  3. ISO says so.
  4. ISO says so.
  5. ISO says so.
  6. ISO says so.
  7. 20 minutes
  8. Screen readers can navigate using Anchor links Headings lists WAI-ARIA roles
  9. Screen readers can navigate using Anchor links Headings lists WAI-ARIA roles
  10. Linear order and restructuring
  11. Readabiilty – now Mercury Reader
  12. If everything is a heading, then navigation by headings has no meaning.
  13. Discuss trend to relying on platform. Made possible by standards-based code. Also means that the changes are persistent. Page zoom vs. text zoom
  14. Display form controls in the same order in HTML as they appear on screen. Do not use CSS to rearrange the form controls. Screen readers narrate forms in the order they appear in the HTML.
  15. 3:15
  16. U.S. National Assessment of Adult Literacy http://nces.ed.gov/naal/kf_demographics.asp Below basic – only the most simple and concrete reading skills Basic – able to manage everyday tasks Intermediate – moderately challenging activities like consulting reference material Proficient – interpreting text, comparing viewpoints Below Basic: 14% or 30 million people Basic: 29% or 63 million people Intermediate: 44% or 95 million Proficient: 13% or 28 million
  17. 3.1.3 Unusual Words: The site includes definitions of words or phrases used in an unusual or restricted way, including idioms and jargon. (Level AAA) 3.1.4 Abbreviations: The meaning of abbreviations is available. (Level AAA)
  18. Extra benefits for SEO, translation, and people listening in noisy environments
  19. Don't
  20. Big debate on WebAIM about this – is this just noise, or meaningful. On UXPA's magazine we went with the first option. But I believe you should not "null" this image, as it is important to the sense of this profile page.
  21. figcaption will replace or work with alt text few browsers support it yet
  22. In this case, there is a caption that provides some of the information, but other useful information is hidden in the alt text, and some is duplicated
  23. Throughout the design process.
  24. Photo: blog.metmuseum.com: Alexander McQueen legs, designed for Aimee Mullins http://blog.metmuseum.org/alexandermcqueen/tag/no-13/ Aimee Mullins: My 12 pairs of legs: http://www.ted.com/talks/aimee_mullins_prosthetic_aesthetics.html