Slide One
EASI
Equal Access to Software
and Information
Students and professionals with disabilities must have the same access to information and resources as everyone else!
Slide Two
EASI
Equal Access to Software and Information
This material has been prepared for EASI by Richard
Banks and Norman Coombs
EASI
P. O. Box 18928
Rochester, NY, 14618
(716) 244-9065)
WEB: http://www.rit.edu/~easi
Email:easi@ofsmail.rit.edu
Slide Three
EASI
ON-LINE AND ON-SITE RESOURCES
ïBarrier-free web design workshop
ïBarrier-free Education technology
ïBarrier-free Distance Learning
ïBusiness and Access
ïAdaptive Technology Consulting
Slide Four
EASI
Publications
Information Access and Adaptive Technology
Oryx Press
Cunningham and Coombs
Electronic pamphlets:
http://www.rit.edu/~easi/pubs.htm
WEB Access Kit
AT Kit
Slide Five
UNIVERSAL WEB DESIGN
ïUniversal web design is creating web pages that are accessible regardless of the user's browser or other access device or the user's unique learning styles or unique physical and/or cognitive abilities.
Slide Six
TYPES OF PRINT DISABILITIES
ïBlindness
ïLow vision
ïMotor impairments
ïHearing Impairments
ïSpeech Impairments
ïLearning disabilities
Slide Seven
BENEFITS OF WEB FOR DISABLED
DInformation hungry and information highway
D Access to books
D Access to magazines and papers
D Access to catalogs
D Access to a world of information
Slide Eight
WHY UNIVERSAL DESIGN?
ïIt's the right thing to do
ïEnabling the "disabled"
ïEmpowering the "powerless"
Slide Nine
WHY UNIVERSAL DESIGN?
ïIt makes economic sense
ïExpand your user base
ïInexpensive alternative text
Slide Ten
WHY UNIVERSAL DESIGN?
ïDo it for yourself
ïAbility to disability is a continuum
ïThe minority anyone can join
Slide Eleven
WHY UNIVERSAL DESIGN?
ïIt's the law!
ï1973 Rehab Act
ïAmericans with Disabilities Act
ïSection 508
ïEASI www.rit.edu/~easi
ïWEBABLE www.webable.com
ïBanks dickbanks@charter.net
ïCoombs nrcgsh@rit.edu
Slide Fourteen
WAI
ïWAI has created many useful resources including:
ïAuthoring tool guidelines
ïWeb design guidelines
ïWeb quick tips
Slide Fifteen
IMAGE AS PAGE
The picture on the PowerPoint slide shows
a webpage that was done as an image. The
Entire site is the front door to the site.
Slide Sixteen
The very same page in the previous slide
With images turned off in the browser.
Slide Seventeen
WAI Quick Tips
Images & animations
ïUse the alt attribute to describe the function of each visual
ï
<img src="picture.gif" width="120" height="35" ALT="EASI Banner">
Slide Eighteen
WAI Quick Tips
Image maps
ïUse client-side MAP and text for hotspots
Slide Nineteen
WAI Quick Tips
Multimedia
ïProvide captioning and transcripts of audio, and descriptions of video.
Slide Twenty
WAI Quick Tips
Hypertext links
ïUse text that makes sense when read out of context. For example, avoid "click here."
Slide Twenty-one
WAI Quick Tips
Page organization
ïUse headings, lists, and consistent structure. Use CSS for layout and style where possible
Slide Twenty-Two
WAI Quick Tips
Graphs & charts
ïSummarize or use the longdesc attribute.
Slide Twenty-Three
WAI Quick Tips
Scripts, applets, & plug-ins
ïProvide alternative content in case active features are inaccessible or unsupported.
Slide Twenty-Four
WAI Quick Tips
Frames
ïUse NOFRAMES and meaningful titles.
Slide Twenty-Five
WAI Quick Tips
Tables
ïMake line by line reading sensible. Summarize.
Slide Twenty-Six
WAI Quick Tips
Check your work
ïValidate. Use tools, checklist, and guidelines at www.w3.org/TR/WCAG.