Accessibility and Disability Defined
Accessibility Defined
An accessible web page is a web page that can be used as effectively
and for the same purpose by a person with a disability as by a person
without a disability.
True Test: Can people with a disabilities use your web page?
Disability Defined
Types of Disabilities
- Cognitive Learning
- Auditory
- Visual (including blind, low vision, and color blind)
- Motor/Physical
- Speech
The web is a highly visual medium, so many accessibility techniques
focus on users with visual disabilities, but you do need to remember
all categories of disabilities.
How Many People with Disabilities?
- 54 million Americans have a disability (source: World Health Organization)
- 36% of people age 55-65 have a disability
- 15% of people age 22-44 have a disability
Apply the 15% to the UT populations of 50,000 students and 20,000
employees and we can assume that 7,500 UT Students and 3,000 UT employees
have a disability.
As audience grows to include parents, alumni, Texans and the
world, you can see the portion of our audience with disabilities is
significant.
Quasi-Disabilities
The techniques to make a website accessible automatically support the
large audience that has what I call quasi-disabilities.
- Slow Internet Connection
- Old Browser
- Missing Plugins
- No Speakers
- Small Display (pda, mobile phone)
- Eyes busy / Hands busy
- Noisy Environment
The population you are helping becomes even larger when you consider
this set of quasi-disabilities.
Assistive Technologies
It helps to understand how a user with a disability can use a website.
Specifically, assistive technology helps people w/ disabilities access
web pages by reducing or removing barriers.
Two examples of commonly used software for people with visual disabilies
are:
- Zoom Text by AI
Squared is a screen magnifying software that makes computers accessible/friendly
to low-vision users
- JAWS by Freedom
Scientific is the most popular screen reading software. JAWS uses
an internal speech synthesizer and the computer sound card to
read information from the computer screen aloud.
The great news is, these technologies works with very little help from
web developers |