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Accessibility Resource Sheet for Web Development

Welcome to the CS132 Accessibility resource sheet!

We’re going to be talking a lot about accessibility in this course. Here are some resources which may help you in achieving minimum accessibility requirements, and other readings and resources that may interest you.

Contents

General readings

Description: Readings which can help you understand what accessible design means, how it differs for different people and situations, and some starting points in making your websites and other projects accessible.

Guidelines

Description: Guidelines that determine whether a website can be considered accessible. It’s important to know that following these guidelines don’t mean that the website will definitely be accessible to everyone, but it does provide solutions to common accessibility problems.

Technical and how-to guides

Description: Instructional guides with examples that help you make web accessibility happen.

Useful software

Description: various tools that can help you check for accessibility and use

Accessibility checkers

Description: Software you can use to quickly check for accessibility issues. This software can’t catch everything, but it can be a good way to do a quick check during development.

Chrome

  • Lighthouse – part of Chrome DevTools which scores sites for performance, accessibility, best practices, and SEO. Important: doesn’t always work for local files.
  • WAVE accessibility checker – a browser extension that audits sites for accessibility and gives you tips on how to improve it. Should work with local files! Chrome has been a bit finicky lately, so if it’s causing you problems, try it on a different computer or use Firefox.

Firefox

Screen readers and how to use them

Description: screen readers you can use with various operating systems and technologies. NOTE: We are working on getting screen readers on all department computers! We’ll keep you posted.

Downloadable Software

All Systems

  • NVDA makes a free downloadable screen reader that you can download onto your machine. Download it for free here.

Linux

  • ORCA is a free downloadable screen reader for Linux. Find user guides and download instructions here.

Mac OS

Mac OS has a built-in VoiceOver utility that you can access via System Preferences.

  • Find Apple’s VoiceOver User Guide here.

Accessibility in the news

Description: Current news articles about accessibility online and in the world.

Further reading

Description: Other resources and literature regarding accessibility, disability justice, and inclusive design.

Disability Justice