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Workshop 5 Disabilities & Assistive Technology for the Web Web Content Accessibility Project Funded by BCcampus Natasha Boskic, Kirsten Bole, Nathan Hapke University of British Columbia
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Workshop 5 Disabilities & Assistive Technology for the Web

Dec 31, 2015

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Workshop 5 Disabilities & Assistive Technology for the Web. Web Content Accessibility Project Funded by BCcampus Natasha Boskic, Kirsten Bole, Nathan Hapke University of British Columbia. Workshop schedule. Monday August 21 Basics of Web Accessibility - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Workshop 5 Disabilities & Assistive Technology for the Web

Workshop 5Disabilities & Assistive

Technology for the Web

Web Content Accessibility Project

Funded by BCcampus

Natasha Boskic, Kirsten Bole, Nathan Hapke

University of British Columbia

Page 2: Workshop 5 Disabilities & Assistive Technology for the Web

Workshop schedule

• Monday August 21Basics of Web Accessibility

• Tuesday August 22Coding an Accessible Website

• Wednesday August 23Accessible Multimedia

• Thursday August 24Creating Usable Content

• Friday August 25Disabilities & Assistive Technology

Page 3: Workshop 5 Disabilities & Assistive Technology for the Web

The Plan

• Overview

• Types of disabilities

• Technologies that address them

Page 4: Workshop 5 Disabilities & Assistive Technology for the Web

What you’ll get out of this

• Understanding of disabilities and how they affect computer use

• Learn what technologies can be used to get around these obstacles

• Can take this knowledge into consideration when planning an online course or website…

• …and when accommodating a disabled student in a classroom course.

Page 5: Workshop 5 Disabilities & Assistive Technology for the Web

Types of disabilities

• Learning/Cognitive

• Visual

• Physical/Motor

• Hearing

Page 6: Workshop 5 Disabilities & Assistive Technology for the Web

Learning/Cognitive

• Learning & emotional disorders most common disability at UBC

• Learning disorders: dyslexia, dysgraphia, ADHD

• Cognitive disorders: brain injury, autism, dementia

• Most difficult to adapt for since there is so much variation

Page 7: Workshop 5 Disabilities & Assistive Technology for the Web

Difficulties experienced

• Attention & concentration

• Resolving written words

• Comprehension of written text

• Planning and time management

• Problem-solving

Page 8: Workshop 5 Disabilities & Assistive Technology for the Web
Page 9: Workshop 5 Disabilities & Assistive Technology for the Web

Everyday items

• Not all AT has to be high-tech

• Day planners

• Calculators

• Sticky notes & highlighters

• Spelling & grammar checkers

Page 10: Workshop 5 Disabilities & Assistive Technology for the Web

Assistive technology

• Similar to low-vision AT

• Screen reader reads text aloud

• Literacy software aids with pronunciation, highlights current line being read

• Predictive typing helps choose right word

• Time management software, palmtops

• Academic advice & consultation

Page 11: Workshop 5 Disabilities & Assistive Technology for the Web
Page 12: Workshop 5 Disabilities & Assistive Technology for the Web

Vision

• Most profoundly affected by Web

• Web is extremely visual

• Web developers need to accommodate needs more than for any other group

Page 13: Workshop 5 Disabilities & Assistive Technology for the Web

Vision

• Screen reader(JAWS)

• Screen magnifier(Zoomtext)

• Braille displays

Page 14: Workshop 5 Disabilities & Assistive Technology for the Web

Physical/motor

• Little or no control of hands

• Injury or condition

• Adaptive keyboards & pointing devices

• Built-in accessibility features for Windows and Mac

• Additional software

Page 15: Workshop 5 Disabilities & Assistive Technology for the Web

Adaptive keyboards

• Keyguards allow hands to rest on keys

• Mini-keyboards minimize hand motion

• Datahand uses finger movement only…

• orbitTouch needsno fine movementat all.

Page 16: Workshop 5 Disabilities & Assistive Technology for the Web

Adaptive pointing devices

• Many alternatives to the standard mouse

• Also can help prevent RSI

• Trackball

• Trackpad

• Graphics tablet

Page 17: Workshop 5 Disabilities & Assistive Technology for the Web

Hands-free computing

• Voice recognition software

• On-screen keyboard

• Head-tracking mouse

• Foot mouse

Page 18: Workshop 5 Disabilities & Assistive Technology for the Web

Accessibility features in OS

• Windows & Mac– Sticky keys / filter keys– Screen magnifiers– Mouse & cursor control– Keyboard navigation– Visual alert

• Windows– On-screen keyboard

• Mac– Speech recognition for specific commands

Page 19: Workshop 5 Disabilities & Assistive Technology for the Web

Hearing

• Web most beneficial to hearing-impaired

• Obstacles include videos, mp3s, podcasts

• Often not essential to course material

• Closed-captioning, transcripts

• Hearing aids

Page 20: Workshop 5 Disabilities & Assistive Technology for the Web

Try it yourself…

• Change the accessibility options in your OS.

• Can you navigate a web site by keyboard alone?

• Download & try a trial version of a screenreader. Can you understand a site read aloud without looking at the screen?

Page 21: Workshop 5 Disabilities & Assistive Technology for the Web

Thank you for coming!

• Natasha Boskic ([email protected])• Kirsten Bole ([email protected])• Nathan Hapke ([email protected])

• Thanks to the Neil Squire Foundation for introducing us to different types of assistive technology.