3 Easy Web Accessibility Guidelines
If you're an innovative educator, chances are you publish work on the web. If you publish work on the web, chances are you want others to read that work. If you want others to read that work, then you need to make it accessible. While that "sounds" good, it may "seem" hard. There are sites you can refer to like Web Aim and you can look at these 5 infographics for details. If you want to know three easy guidelines to always keep in mind, a colleague of mine, shared the following with me and I'm sharing with the innovative educators who read this blog.
Three easy guidelines for web accessibility:
- Text: For text, stick to contrast that is close to that of black on white and fonts that are at least 12 point. (Headlines can be a little less crisp).
- I generally use the blog's default here, which I believe takes this into consideration.
- Images: Don’t put text in images (.jpegs, .bmps, video) that isn’t on the page itself. It can’t be machine translated or read by devices used by the visually impaired.
- This is a mistake I make often. I will go back through my recent posts and update to meet this guideline.
- Colors: A significant portion of the population is red/green colorblind to some degree—so using red and green to “code” meaning (stop and go, good and bad) will not work for those people.
- Interesting. Something I likely have done, but will stop doing in future posts.
If you prefer infographics, here is one from http://WebAim.org
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