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Next Leeds Event Monday 27th February – Accessibility in Practice

24/01/2012 in Accessibility, Usability

This session will be a practical look at Accessibility in action.

Clare Davidson from SimpleUsability will be joined by Barry Hill, who has been using Jaws for the past 15 years. This session will give you the opportunity to see how Barry navigates his way through websites using Jaws assistive technology. We will then discuss how accessible these websites are and what changes should be made to improve the user experience.

Clare Davidson is a User Experience Consultant, working at SimpleUsability. Previous roles have included working at Lloyds Banking Group and Aviva.

The event will be held courtesy of SimpleUsability and will be held in the Round Foundry Media Centre.

To order a free ticket please go to; http://accessibilityinaction.eventbrite.com/

To find us on twitter use #nuxuk or you can find us on facebook by searching ‘Northern User Experience’

Next Leeds Event on Monday 24th October; Developing Accessibility

11/10/2011 in Events

David Swallow will be discussing; Developing Accessibility – the more things change, the more they stay the same.

In an effort to try and improve the development of accessible websites, David is currently researching how better to support web developers. Charting the numerous web accessibility initiatives that have emerged in the last decade or so, as well as exploring the impact they have had, David aims to establish the factors that contribute towards and mitigate against accessible web development.
 
Rather than doing all the talking himself, however, David hopes to provoke a bit of a discussion and gain valuable feedback on your experiences of web accessibility: why you make your websites accessible, what tools and guidelines you use, and how you think accessible web development could be improved in future.

About David Swallow
David Swallow is a Research Associate in the Department of Computer Science at the University of York. He is currently working on a number of European Commission-funded projects, including i2Web, which aims to create tools for developing and evaluating accessible web applications. He is also undertaking a PhD investigating how best to support web developers in the creation of usable and accessible websites. This draws upon his work on the i2Web project and also his previous role as a web developer.

 

If you are planning on coming register here;

http://www.eventbrite.com/event/2121777293

The event will be held at the SimpleUsability Offices, held in the Round Foundry Media Centre and starting at 6:30pm (There will be beer, wine and plenty of soft drinks too!)

Critical Friend

03/07/2008 in Accessibility, Usability

We talked a little in Wednesday’s (July 2nd) meeting about the lack of recognised qualifications to audit or certify a web site as “accessible”. I recalled a customer of my company had asked about the use of a “trusted friend”. Alas, my recollection was faulty and the phrase they had used was “critical friend”.

It is desirable that the system meets the W3C level 2 accessibility standards or conforms to another equivalent standard…
Please supply detail of how you audit your systems compliance to achieve accessibility standards. Do you make use of a ‘critical friend’ in this process if so, please state…

– extract from a request for tender document

I researched at the time the meaning of this phrase, which was new to me, and found the following reference in Wikipedia:

A critical friend can be defined as a trusted person who asks provocative questions, provides data to be examined through another lens, and offers critiques of a person’s work as a friend. A critical friend takes the time to fully understand the context of the work presented and the outcomes that the person or group is working toward. The friend is an advocate for the success of that work.

Wikipedia article ‘Critical Friend’

The concept is very interesting and seems to have been coined in the context of UK local government.

To paraphrase, I might describe a critical friend as someone who is knowledgeable and honest enough to tell you the truth about the bad stuff, but who will, equally, give praise about the good stuff. A ‘consultant’ who is likely to dress up your short comings in fancy praise-sounding words in a fat document for a fat fee will not do.

It needs to be someone who is knowledgeable about the system under review or at least the domain involved. Someone who perhaps has a moral interest in seeing that the system succeeds: both for your organisation as supplier and the end user as consumer, but who can still be paid a reasonable fee for their time.

In the case of an accessibility review it needs to be someone who can look at the whole picture; beyond just the validity of the mark-up and ticking the boxes from the WCAG check-lists. Someone who can empathise with at least some of the challenges faced by people with a range of disabilities. Someone who can understand the use cases and evaluate your system from a functional, goal oriented viewpoint.

It naturally follows that this someone must understand ‘usability’ and the very close relationship between the two disciplines — An accessible site is likely to be more usable and a more usable site goes a long way to address some of the cognitive accessibility issues.