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Tips and Tricks for Website Accessibility Training

Tips and Tricks for Website Accessibility Training. Annual Conference of Assistive Technology Act Programs May 24, 2007. Training That Works. AT programs have the capability to be leading advocates in their states for accessible information technology. Training That Works.

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Tips and Tricks for Website Accessibility Training

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  1. Tips and Tricks for Website Accessibility Training Annual Conference of Assistive Technology Act Programs May 24, 2007 New Jersey Protection and Advocacy, Inc. New Jersey's designated protection and advocacy system for people with disabilities

  2. Training That Works • AT programs have the capability to be leading advocates in their states for accessible information technology. New Jersey Protection and Advocacy, Inc. New Jersey's designated protection and advocacy system for people with disabilities

  3. Training That Works • Providing training to IT professionals is a key means of raising awareness about accessibility issues. New Jersey Protection and Advocacy, Inc. New Jersey's designated protection and advocacy system for people with disabilities

  4. Training That Works • AT programs can utilize the tips and tricks presented in this training to develop a training curriculum to meet the needs of IT professionals. New Jersey Protection and Advocacy, Inc. New Jersey's designated protection and advocacy system for people with disabilities

  5. Tip #1 – Show Off Your AT Skills • Introduce the audience to AT in general and screen readers in particular. New Jersey Protection and Advocacy, Inc. New Jersey's designated protection and advocacy system for people with disabilities

  6. Tip #1 – Show Off Your AT Skills • Most of your audience will have no idea about what AT is and what it does. New Jersey Protection and Advocacy, Inc. New Jersey's designated protection and advocacy system for people with disabilities

  7. Tip #1 – Show Off Your AT Skills • Saying something even as simple as “Alt tags help people who use screen readers understand images” is useless if the audience isn’t familiar with screen readers. New Jersey Protection and Advocacy, Inc. New Jersey's designated protection and advocacy system for people with disabilities

  8. Tip #1 – Show Off Your AT Skills • Try to develop a happy medium between talking about screen readers and other technologies. New Jersey Protection and Advocacy, Inc. New Jersey's designated protection and advocacy system for people with disabilities

  9. Tip #1 – Show Off Your AT Skills • The various IT accessibility standards center around screen readers, but cover other AT devices as well. New Jersey Protection and Advocacy, Inc. New Jersey's designated protection and advocacy system for people with disabilities

  10. Tricks for Tip #1 • The simplest trick is to show off a screen reader. • Expensive: JAWS • Cheap: Home Page Reader • Free: Windows Narrator New Jersey Protection and Advocacy, Inc. New Jersey's designated protection and advocacy system for people with disabilities

  11. Tricks for Tip #1 • However, if you don’t have a great deal of time (or expertise in using screen readers) you can show a video of a screen reader user. • http://www.doit.wisc.edu/accessibility/video/intro.asp New Jersey Protection and Advocacy, Inc. New Jersey's designated protection and advocacy system for people with disabilities

  12. Tip #2 – Show Off Your Toolbox • Introduce the audience to the various online tools available to evaluate website accessibility. New Jersey Protection and Advocacy, Inc. New Jersey's designated protection and advocacy system for people with disabilities

  13. Tip #2 – Show Off Your Toolbox • IT professionals love cool tools to play with, especially if they’re free. New Jersey Protection and Advocacy, Inc. New Jersey's designated protection and advocacy system for people with disabilities

  14. Tricks for Tip #2 • Download the Accessibility Toolbar. • http://www.visionaustralia.org.au/ais/toolbar/ New Jersey Protection and Advocacy, Inc. New Jersey's designated protection and advocacy system for people with disabilities

  15. Tricks for Tip #2 • The Accessibility Toolbar has a collection of the best tools for validating and assessing website accessibility, all on one easy-to-use toolbar within Internet Explorer. New Jersey Protection and Advocacy, Inc. New Jersey's designated protection and advocacy system for people with disabilities

  16. Tricks for Tip #2 • The Accessibility Toolbar works very well in a hands-on training (if you can get it downloaded to every computer). New Jersey Protection and Advocacy, Inc. New Jersey's designated protection and advocacy system for people with disabilities

  17. Tip #3 – Don’t Show Up Your Audience • The easiest trap to fall into is to use the evaluation tools on the website of an audience member. New Jersey Protection and Advocacy, Inc. New Jersey's designated protection and advocacy system for people with disabilities

  18. Tip #3 – Don’t Show Up Your Audience • There’s no easier way to alienate your audience than by pointing out the shortcomings of their own websites. New Jersey Protection and Advocacy, Inc. New Jersey's designated protection and advocacy system for people with disabilities

  19. Tip #3 – Don’t Show Up Your Audience • Even using corporate websites or university websites can backfire. New Jersey Protection and Advocacy, Inc. New Jersey's designated protection and advocacy system for people with disabilities

  20. Tricks for Tip #3 • Use the “Mouse College” website to illustrate bad website design. • http://www.csufresno.edu/webaccess/learningmodules/bad/ New Jersey Protection and Advocacy, Inc. New Jersey's designated protection and advocacy system for people with disabilities

  21. Tricks for Tip #3 • “Mouse College” was developed by the University of California – Fresno to serve as an example of bad website design. New Jersey Protection and Advocacy, Inc. New Jersey's designated protection and advocacy system for people with disabilities

  22. Tricks for Tip #3 • Try using the evaluation tools on the “Mouse College” website to highlight the problems a user would have accessing information. New Jersey Protection and Advocacy, Inc. New Jersey's designated protection and advocacy system for people with disabilities

  23. Tricks for Tip #3 • You can save the “Mouse College” site to your computer in case you don’t have Internet access during your training. New Jersey Protection and Advocacy, Inc. New Jersey's designated protection and advocacy system for people with disabilities

  24. Tricks for Tip #3 • If you’d rather take the more positive approach, you can demonstrate “Federal Court Concepts,” a model accessible site. • http://www.catea.org/grade/legal/index.html New Jersey Protection and Advocacy, Inc. New Jersey's designated protection and advocacy system for people with disabilities

  25. Tip #4 – Show Off Accessible Design • Show that accessible design doesn’t have to mean ugly design. New Jersey Protection and Advocacy, Inc. New Jersey's designated protection and advocacy system for people with disabilities

  26. Tip #4 – Show Off Accessible Design • Website designers value the visual aspects of their craft, and don’t want to be told how to make websites accessible at the cost of prettiness. New Jersey Protection and Advocacy, Inc. New Jersey's designated protection and advocacy system for people with disabilities

  27. Tip #4 – Show Off Accessible Design • There’s a myth that accessible design equals ugly design: • http://www.empowermentzone.com/ New Jersey Protection and Advocacy, Inc. New Jersey's designated protection and advocacy system for people with disabilities

  28. Tricks for Tip #4 • Demonstrate CSS Zen Garden: • http://www.csszengarden.com/ New Jersey Protection and Advocacy, Inc. New Jersey's designated protection and advocacy system for people with disabilities

  29. Tricks for Tip #4 • CSS stands for “Cascading Style Sheets.” By swapping out the style sheet on a given page, you can create a new version of the page with a different design. New Jersey Protection and Advocacy, Inc. New Jersey's designated protection and advocacy system for people with disabilities

  30. Tricks for Tip #4 • Encouraging IT professionals to use CSS can allow for greater accessibility. New Jersey Protection and Advocacy, Inc. New Jersey's designated protection and advocacy system for people with disabilities

  31. Tricks for Tip #4 • However, using CSS doesn’t guarantee good design: • http://csszengarden.com/?cssfile=http://www.brucelawson.co.uk/zen/sample.css New Jersey Protection and Advocacy, Inc. New Jersey's designated protection and advocacy system for people with disabilities

  32. Tip #5 – Keep Your Presentation Short New Jersey Protection and Advocacy, Inc. New Jersey's designated protection and advocacy system for people with disabilities

  33. The End • Any questions? New Jersey Protection and Advocacy, Inc. New Jersey's designated protection and advocacy system for people with disabilities

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