Hi Brad,
I haven't done much with web standards for accessibility requirements but it is in
the plan for Dataverse 4.0 Beta (
dataverse-demo.iq.harvard.edu/) to make sure we are
complying. I have met with a woman at HUIT who does a lot of accessibility testing for
Harvard websites and applications. She informed me that they use WCAG guidelines:
http://www.w3.org/WAI/intro/wcag
The minimum is to have your product compliant with WCAG 1.0.
Also, I'll be testing Dataverse 4.0 Beta with JAWS screen reader and Dragon speech
recognition software, which are used here at Harvard, to see how WCAG 1.0 compliant it
is.
I believe, but could be wrong, that being WCAG 1.0 compliant would help with potential
dyslexia problems. I'm not sure how user friendly it would be to have to know to
switch to a dyslexic friendly format.
Once I run testing on Dataverse 4.0 Beta, I could put together some of what was found to
send out so everyone can see what types of issues are found. That might be useful.
Hope this helps!
Elizabeth
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1. Re: Understanding UX & Usability Slides (Frank, Bradley)
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Message: 1
Date: Wed, 14 May 2014 16:55:37 -0400
From: "Frank, Bradley" <bfrank(a)hmdc.harvard.edu>
To: "[List] Tech Talk" <techtalkfollowup(a)lists.iq.harvard.edu>
Subject: Re: [TechTalkFollowup] Understanding UX & Usability Slides
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Hi Elizabeth,
Loved the Tech Talk, got us thinking about a lot of the elements in RCE. I was curious how
much you deal with web standards. I spent a great deal of time formatting one specific
webpage to be as standards-compliant /and/ accessible as possible, which meant following
HTML5 and ARIA for the most part. They have a test tool here:
http://wave.webaim.org/ but
it doesn't cover everything.
I learned that certain formatting can assist people with dyslexia, and there are
guidelines to improve their user experience:
http://www.bdadyslexia.org.uk/about-dyslexia/further-information/dyslexia-s…
.
I concluded that it would essentially require a separate CSS file, and a little JS maybe
to allow users to switch between the two. But other wise doable I think. (Sadly I
didn't quite get that far myself, and there doesn't seem to be any other
guidelines for this.)
Any thoughts on something like this? Are there other visual/neurological impairments that
you've come across that websites can format for?
Brad