About accessibility
- Why is it important to make your web
site accessible?
- How many students could be affected
by inaccessible web sites?
Impairments and the experience of an inaccessible web site:
- Visual impairment;
- Hearing impairment, mobility, seizure
disorders;
- Dyslexia.
Making your site meet University standards
- An approach to accessibility.
- Web Content Accessibility guidelines
(from the W3C WAI).
- LIFT for Dreamweaver, an automated
tool to check your compliance with the W3C WAI guidelines
- get it and use it.
- The University's policies on
disability and web site accessibility.
- Further resources
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The University's commitment to web site accessibility
The University has been keen to support staff in building
accessible web sites. On 25th April 2001 John
Walsh ran a Web Co-ordinators' forum with a focus on raising
awareness of accessibility issues in web design and authoring.
This Accessibility area of the webforum site is developed
from that seminar.
At that stage there was no University policy on web site
accessibility. Since then, however, a draft
statement that refers to the use of internationally recognised
accessibility standards has allowed us to develop more detailed
guidance on how to make your pages accessible.
Don't confuse accessibility with usability,
which is more widely concerned with making sites easier to use for
all your visitors.
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