+ All Categories
Home > Technology > Accessibility In Government W S G Nov 2007

Accessibility In Government W S G Nov 2007

Date post: 11-Nov-2014
Category:
Upload: stamford
View: 1,059 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
Description:
Ruth Ellison looks at some things to be aware of when implementing accessibility in an Australian Government context, from organisational level issues to people and technology challenges.
Popular Tags:
49
Implementing accessibility in Government: a holistic approach Ruth Ellison Canberra Web Standards Group 21 November 2007
Transcript
Page 1: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

Implementing accessibility in Government:

a holistic approachRuth Ellison

Canberra Web Standards Group21 November 2007

Page 2: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

What is accessibility?

Page 3: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007
Page 4: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

Photo credit: http://www.flickr.com/photos/wallyg/563188608/

Page 5: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007
Page 6: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

Accessibility - the definition

The degree to which a system is usable by as many people as

possible, including…

Page 7: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

Visual

blindness, low vision, colour blindness

Cognitivedyslexia, ADD

Physical/motortemporary or permanent

Hearing

Page 8: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

Situational disabilities

Technology/infrastructure limited

Aging population

People from culturally / linguistic diverse backgrounds

Page 9: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

ABS survey in 2003….

20% of Australians have a disability

15% accident or injury

14% disease, illness or heredity

11% working conditions, work or over-work

Page 10: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

Understanding accessibility

Impact or severity is varied

Invisible disabilities

Temporary impairments

Permanent impairmentsBorn with a disabilityDevelop it over time

Page 11: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

Accessibility is not a stand alone process

Page 12: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

Think about accessibility earlier…

Page 13: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

Holistic and multi-disciplinary approach

Usability AND accessibility together and part of the overall

user experience

Page 14: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

Considerations

Page 15: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

ORGANISATIONAL

Page 16: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

An ad hoc approach

Many organisations take an ad hoc or as-needed approach to accessibility

Issues include:– Expensive retrofitting exercises – Accessibility information based in a

small team, which can disappear

Page 17: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

Accessibility approach

Accessibility teamAuthority and responsibility to

implement changeRaise awarenessSet standardsQuality assurance including testing

Page 18: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

Management

Find a sponsor / championGet management support

Page 19: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

Funding

Consideration of a centralised accessibility fund to fund

accessibility design, support and testing

Page 20: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

Show ROI

Reduced compensation claimsReduced maintenanceReduce possibility of litigation

Page 21: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

Purchasing decisions

Customised versus off-the-shelfConsideration of accessibility &

usability requirements in tender processes

Page 22: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

Need to factor enough time for:

User researchIterative design

Standards based development Testing

Timeframes

Page 23: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

Build relationships

Occupational Health & SafetyHuman Resources

AT user groupsBusiness areas

Media teamIT

Page 24: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

Training

Focused training to provide good

grounding of technical aspects & laws

Page 25: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

Other considerations

Disability Action Plan / Diversity Plans

Central registry of Assistive Technology users

Page 26: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

FRAMEWORK AND TOOLS

Page 27: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

Standards and guidelines should have accessibility built into it

Distribution method

Keep it updated

Standards & guidelines

Page 28: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

Assistive technologies

JAWS, Dragon, ZoomText

Other types of assistive technologies

Page 29: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

ZoomText keyboard

Page 30: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

Braille refreshable display

Page 31: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007
Page 32: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

Tools

Which Assistive Technologies to support?

Have consistent versionsFactor in upgrade costs

Page 33: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

EvaluationsShould be done early and oftenMore than compliance

– Still need to do automated testing and testing requiring human judgement

Usability testing with real people

Page 34: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

PEOPLE

Page 35: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

ResearchWho are the users?

People with disabilities should be one of your key personas

What tools are they using?How well do they know their tools?

Page 36: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

Project Managers’ understanding of accessibility

Page 37: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

Developers’ understanding of accessibility

Page 38: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

Business owners’ understanding of accessibility

Page 39: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

Designers’ understanding of accessibility

Page 40: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

DesignVisual – size of text, colours, typography

Cognitive – white spacing, progress indicators

Physical – fly out menus, size of elements

Hearing – captions, use of sound

Situational – environmental factors

Page 41: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

UsersGet them involvedHelp increase their knowledge of Assistive

TechnologiesTest early, test oftenKnowledge sharing forum

Page 42: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

Get passionate people on board!

Page 43: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

Expertise is essentialGet the right staff With the right skillsWith the right attitude

Page 44: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

Get involvedConferences Web Standards Group Community of Practice

Read/comment in Blogs

Page 45: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

Remember…

Page 46: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

Accessibility is not a stand alone process

Page 47: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

Holistic and multi-disciplinary

Early consideration

Be passionate

Page 48: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

Questions?

Page 49: Accessibility In  Government    W S G    Nov 2007

Need more info?

Ruth EllisonEmail: [email protected]: 02 6280 7834Mobile: 0423 763 314Web: www.stamfordinteractive.com.au


Recommended