Accessiblity solutions

Applying the core concepts of accessibility is nothing new; it is simply an extension of good usability. Making a site accessible to visually impaired readers, dyslexic users or those who find it difficult to use a mouse is an extension of making the site accessible to everyone.

 

For example, did you know that dyslexic people find it difficult to read longer pieces of text and that the wider the column of text the more difficult it is to read? Also that serif fonts (such as Times New Roman) are more difficult for dyslexic people to read, as are words in italics? However, research has shown that, when it comes to reading from the screen, most people actually respond in a dyslexic way. So in addressing the needs of this audience you are improving the experience for many more.

 

But the process of content management and content management systems themselves can help in a number of ways to create websites that are more accessible.

 

Clearly, the whole concept of devolving content management responsibilities to ever wider groups of users is potentially hazardous in terms of providing a consistent and easily navigated site.

 

So, starting on a simplistic level, having a system that offers a high level of control over the creation and implementation of templates and styles is a good starting point.

 

Although it is clearly crucial that these styles and templates incorporate the best practice guidelines with regard to accessibility a number of which are listed here...

 

  • Avoid relying on colour alone
  • Good crisp contrast
  • Use relative text sizes
  • Structural markup of content
  • Clear and consistent navigation

 

Having a system that provides what we at Immediacy call a 'mandatory accessibility switch' helps to ensure that those contributing and managing content undertake those easily forgotton and overlooked functions such as filling in the 'alt tags on a site with something meaningful.

 

 

Mandatory Accessibility Checker

 

 

For both visually impaired and mobility impaired visitors the way in which menus and form elements work can be vitally important to their experience on the site. And if you're using things like drop-down menus or creating forms on your site, then having the capability within your system to provide suitably accessible key commands and short-cuts automatically, clearly gives you confidence that your site is going to satisfy the main accessibility guidelines.

 

Also, having a system that automatically creates a 'text only' view of the website is clearly timesaving and efficient, although the RNIB would certainly advise that a 'text only' option is a poor substitute for addressing the wider accessibility issues on a website and is often used in the misguided belief that this is sufficient to tick the accessibility box.

 

It's worth considering that while a poorly sighted person may well benefit from larger font sizes and higher contrast colours, why should they be penalised by not having the pictures at all? Additionally allowing a user to select the presentation of content such as font styles and colours will assist but not necessarily overcome the navigational issues in a site.

 

While taking some of the steps outlined so far may help achieve levels of compliance are you actually providing what a disabled person may need?

 

In many respects, the only way you can really start to address the Perse needs of disabled people is by creating multiple sites that are fit for the purpose they are intended for.
 
In our offline world, an architect or designer creating a living space for somone who is blind, would approach that challenge from a completely different perspective, where it wouldn't be the look, light and space of the environment that was the top priority but the way in which the space could be navigated, the ease with which items could be located, the sound surfaces made or the way they feel.
 
The same applies to the online world. Good web design relies as much on visual clues as anything else to help sighted people navigate their way around but a site designed on these principles is unlikely to perform well with a hearing based browser.
 
The best hearing navigator-focused sites for example take a very different approach to linking, titling, and content organisation. They also incorporate some simple tricks to greatly speed navigation. A special link to "jump directly to content" and skip that page's navigation is very helpful, for example. Providing titles to the list of links, or even spelling out what the list of links is about can let a hearing-based navigator share the same visual clues that show a sighted navigator which links are major or minor, higher or lower in hierarchy, etc.
 
Without a content management system, owning and managing multiple web sites -- one for use by browsers, one for use by readers -- means twice the work. With a good content management system in place, however, new content can be added once and published to two or more sites effortlessly. When a visitor comes to the web site, the web server can detect whether a web browser or a reader is requesting the page, and deliver up the correct site. In this way, everyone receives a site optimised to the way in which they access the web.
 
Templates for two or more sites still need to be proactively designed, especially if you give careful attention to navigability for the impaired. Nevertheless, for experienced web design companies, converting a site from browser-exclusive to reader-focused is a straightforward project because the content is already categorised and organised.
 
Even better, CMS templates can be easily modified to make changes or improvements site-wide. This is important, because Web accessibility remains a young discipline:
  • standards sometimes change,
  • implementation practices and standards interpretations are evolving,
  • new reader technologies are emerging,
 
With a CMS, you can publish completely new sites to accommodate specific new readers, or to meet conflicting requirements.