Technology in Education
Discover how technology can super-charge your education as a blind or partially sighted student. Check out our informative guides and resources and get started!
Find out more about 'Technology in Education'In partnership with All Able Ltd we have pulled together this useful guide for colleges to help with checking the accessibility of websites.
Start by establishing which teams, services, digital platforms and resources students will interact with during their time at college. Then, identify the potential accessibility barriers which might impact students in each of those cases.
It is a great idea to map the student journey to identify key processes that need to be considered. Knowing where digital platforms sit within the student journey will benefit the removal of accessibility issues. A knowledge of what you have and how students will interact with them is a vital first step to prioritising what services need work first.
These resources will help you along the way:
When considering where to begin, think about the following to guide you:
Once you have prioritised which systems and resources to tackle first, the next step is to test each of the identified websites / systems / platforms / learning resources to check their accessibility.
To get started with testing your web-based content and systems for accessibility, begin with these Quick accessibility checks from LexDis. The Microsoft Accessibility Insights automated testing tool is a useful free accessibility checker tool which runs on Microsoft Edge and Google Chrome browsers. It will help to find and fix accessibility issues in your web-based content.
Common applications such as Microsoft Office and Adobe have built-in accessibility checking features that can be used now to check the accessibility of existing documents.
Microsoft – Improve accessibility with the Accessibility Checker.
Using the Acrobat Pro DC Accessibility Checker,
Once you have completed the basic testing, it is highly recommended you progress to in-depth manual testing – testing with assistive technologies such as NVDA and user research with disabled students, to not only ensure compliance with legal requirements but also create highly user-friendly accessible content.
For more information on accessibility testing, read this informative resource from LexDis:
Guidance on accessibility testing resources
The requirement for colleges to publish accessibility statements has existed since 2018. If your college does not have an accessibility statement published for the main website by now, you are at serious legal risk.
These statements have very specific legal requirements alongside responsibilities for providing guidance and support to users. To produce an accessibility statement, you must first know what accessibility issues the platform has after completing accessibility testing.
Our research into accessibility in further education found that 63% of colleges in the UK do not provide legally required accessibility information. Find out how your college scored in our tests.
To write a compliant accessibility statement, use the CDDO Sample accessibility statement template. Be sure to read the example carefully and consider what accessibility issues your platform has as well as any applicable exemptions.
For many systems delivered by 3rd parties, such as most virtual learning environment (VLE) platform foundations and the Microsoft Office 365 suite, there is often already ample accessibility support information available which colleges can tap into when writing their statements and guidance material.
Find out more about accessibility statements here:
LexDis guidance on accessibility statements.
Disproportionate burden is a clause in the public sector accessibility regulations that allows organisations to avoid full compliance without penalty (not indefinitely) if you can prove that to achieve compliance would be a ‘disproportionate burden’.
To do this you must thoroughly evidence, that compliance would for example:
The Government Digital Service (GDS) (regulation monitoring body), has provided guidance on the types of evidence expected to support a disproportionate burden claim and what NOT to claim for.
When completing an accessibility statement, you will have to write the level of compliance you believe your website conforms to. The regulations give the options of “fully”, “partially”, or “not-compliant”.
You should be careful when considering which level of compliance you state in any accessibility statements you write.
Colleges looking for “easy” routes to compliance should be wary of ‘overlay’ products.
Overlays are products marketed to improve or fix accessibility issues on a website, by adding a small snippet of code, or a button to your web pages which will “fix” the user experience. Some of these products market themselves as using artificial intelligence while others advertise user customisability. We are concerned that colleges are a vulnerable sector to these such offers.
We advise that colleges avoid paying for or utilising overlay products in all cases for the following reasons:
There is no alternative to an accessible by design website that you have developed in the correct way.
Discover how technology can super-charge your education as a blind or partially sighted student. Check out our informative guides and resources and get started!
Find out more about 'Technology in Education'Explore our guide about delivering accessible learning, to help Further Education providers ensure blind and partially sighted students get the right support.
Find out more about 'Delivering Accessible Learning: A Guide for Further Education Providers Supporting Blind and Partially Sighted Students'Discover a range of resources to support your studies in college, further education or an apprenticeship as a blind and partially sighted student.
Find out more about 'College, Sixth Form and Apprenticeships'Explore how our campaign is calling for blind and partially sighted students to have equal access to post-16 education, and hear the voice of students!
Find out more about 'Give Me Access to College'