Category Archives: Information Accessibility

Engaging with disabled people

As recent events in Christchurch have shown it is not sensible to ignore sections of the community, assuming that they are someone else’s responsibility. Engaging with disabled people is critical because failure to do so creates significant risk. In the case of a disaster like the Christchurch earthquakes lack of engagement and appropriate communication by emergency services and planners can result in unnecessary suffering and even death.

Many people have choices about the way they engage with their local communities, central and local government, emergency and other organisations. Other people do not. They face significant barriers, and these barriers are frequently not taken into account when governments and other organisations engage with communities.

The numbers of people who face barriers may surprise you.

  • Older people are increasing in numbers. They are 13% of the population now and increasing in number with higher rate of disability as the population ages
  • 20% of the population have one or more disabilities
  • 40% of the working age population have poor literacy and 20% have English as a second language.

Together they are a sizable proportion of any community.

They are all citizens too with a rightful place in the community, the right to a voice, and the right to be heard, and the right to be included in rescue and recovery.

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Filed under Accessible Engagement, Disability Issues, Disability Rights, Information Accessibility, Media

Simulating real world testing

There are excellent automated tools on the web which are regularly used for web accessibility testing, for example, accessibility validators like Wave or web developer Firefox extensions or Luminosity Contrast Ratio Analyser or FireEyes.

As accessibility expert Glenda Sim explained at Webstock recently 27% of testing for accessibility can be done automatically. Such testing can establish whether the basics of accessibility have been achieved.

But she also said that what she called ‘hands on’ testing and we call real world testing, is the final arbiter of accessibility. Automated tools will not take the place of live human testers.

Downloading a screen reader and testing using a sighted person, even with the screen turned off, although that may be a salutary experience in itself. Is no substitution for the real thing. A person who can see well won’t have the same way of thinking or perceiving information as a blind person.

Of course real world testing is not about blindness alone. Other disabled people experience their own particular barriers to using web sites. They may have low vision, which is a very different experience from blindness, or they may have physical impairments that prevent them from using the mouse or the keyboard, For Deaf the written language is not their first language. Others may take medication that impairs their concentration. Yet others may have dyslexia or cognitive difficulties. Their experience or way of seeing, perceiving and processing information cannot be simulated either.

Disabled people using computers will be reasonably accustomed to impairment, and have a level of competence in using their technology a non-impaired person would not be expected to have. It is impossible, and rather insulting, to simulate the experience of another person in this context. In the real world no one is ever suddenly confronted with impairment and expected to function immediately and efficiently with or without different technology. Simulation is not therefore an option.

There is no escaping the imperative of listening to the voices and experience of disabled people. We are the best experts on our own experience.

The most important thing about real world testing is that it identifies accessibility problems not found in the rest of the accessibility testing process. When fixed all visitors to your site will have a better experience.

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Filed under Disability Issues, Disability Rights, Information Accessibility, Web Accessibility

Real world testing with people inside your organisation

Usability testing is generally done with outside users. That is, people who are not part of the organisation which owns the site. They should also not be familiar with the content of the site being tested. The same should be true for accessibility. Yet I know some organisations will check with a handy blind employee and consider that as adequate accessibility user testing.

It is not practical or best practice to use disabled people from within your organisation to test a website. While they may be able to contribute useful feedback, their familiarity with the organisation and the content of the site will mean the experience will not be that of a ‘real’ external user.

They may also feel constrained by their position within the organisation from freely responding in a test.

Accessibility testing requires a range of potential disabled users with a variety of impairments and using different assistive technologies in their everyday situations. It is unlikely that most organisations include a full range of disabled people on staff anyway, so results from testing with a limited range of people with a limited range of impairments and technologies will not give the best outcomes.

Achieving accessibility on the Web requires organisational commitment, which means sound policy, training and accountability, an understanding of standards and best practice, good technical backup and an acceptance of universal design principles and the reasons for making a web site accessible in the first place. Real world testing is an essential part of the mix in achieving accessibility.

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Filed under Disability Issues, Disability Rights, Information Accessibility, Web Accessibility

Real world testing for web accessibility

You’ve carefully read and tried to tick the boxes for most of those irritating government web accessibility standards, and the W3C accessibility Standards, and still the pesky ‘crips and blindies’ complain about your web site not being accessible to them. What to do?

Sadly all the box ticking in the world won’t guarantee an accessible web site. Accessibility is not all about a score on a list of standards, although of course standards provide the basis for best practice, and they are certainly a necessary foundation for accessibility. But adherence to standards alone will not guarantee the accessibility of your site.

Real world testing is an essential element of web accessibility. By that I mean testing by a variety of disabled users with their regular technology and in their regular everyday situations so the real problems they as users experience can be revealed, and solved.

In ten years experience we have discovered that there are some critical aspects of accessibility that will only be discovered by real disabled testers. Alternative text for images is an example. Only a human tester can tell if it adds real meaning to the information on the page for them.

Nothing about us without us!

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Filed under Disability Issues, Disability Rights, Information Accessibility, Web Accessibility