Evaluating accessibility practice

These notes are part of a series for the book.

Seale, J. (2014) ‘Ch. 6, Evaluating accessibility practice’ in E-Learning and Disability in Higher Education: Accessibility research and practice, 2nd ed., New York, Routledge.

Outline

  1. Introduction
    1. Evaluating artifacts of practice
    2. Evaluating learning resources
    3. Evaluating web accessibility
    4. Evaluating accessibility policies
  2. Evaluating service provision
    1. A service auditing tool
  3. Conclusion

Notes

There are several levels at which to evaluate accessibility. You can evaluate learning resources, websites, accessibility policies, and service provision.

Learning resources

Different studies have approached the evaluation of learning resources differently. This chapter discusses a dozen or more studies that focused on evaluating the accessibility of resources as varied as Google Docs, e-book platforms, and LMSs. The studies approached their evaluations in different manners, such as:

Websites

Policies

One interesting study that evaluated accessibility policies was a large-scale study conducted in 2010 of 50 American universities (one in each state). They needed to evaluate the policies against a standard, and so they started with WebAim’s seven criteria for accessibility policies and then added to that six more it. Here’s what they found:

This criteria...From...Was met by...
Reasons for the accessibility policy
BradbardMost of the schools
Standards and guidelinesWebAimMost of the schools
To whom the policy appliesWebAimLess than 50% of the schools
DefinitionsBradbardLess than 50% of the schools
Lists of responsibilitiesBradbardMore than 50% of the schools, but not in detail
Training resourcesWebAim
Less than 50% of the schools
Tips and examplesBradbardMost of the schools
Validation toolsBradbardMore than 50% of the schools, but not in detail
Timeframe for implementationWebAimLess than 50% of the schools
How accessibility efforts are approvedWebAimLess than 50% of the schools
How the policy will be enforcedWebAimLess than 50% of the schools
What happens when the standards are not metWebAimLess than 50% of the schools
Contact informationBradbardMore than 50% of the schools, but not in detail

(This is my summary of Bradbard et al. (2010), as told by Seale (2014), pp. 109-110)

Service provision

There are several different levels for evaluation:

  1. Institutional: Our laws are focused on changing practice at this level.
  2. Service: This is the department, unit, school, or faculty level, and there is a gap here.
    • I thought this was an interesting comment: ‘In thinking about how useful it is to audit or evaluate accessible e-learning service delivery, it is possible to see that services would be resistant to having to undergo yet another quality assurance exercise on top of all the others that they are required to undertake by their institutions and by external funding agencies. Therefore any audit tool that is developed will probably need to be developed by and for service providers, probably with a view to using it as an informal self-development tool’ (Seale, 2014, p. 118).
  3. Individual: Many guidelines and standards are focused on this level.

See also

Bradbard, D.A., Peters, C., and Caneva, Y. (2010) ‘Web accessibility policies at land-grant universities’, Internet and Higher Education, vol. 13, pp. 258-266 [Online]. DOI: 10.1016/j.iheduc.2010.05.007.

WAVE web accessibility tool: http://wave.webaim.org/; also available as a browser extension for Chrome and Firefox, at http://wave.webaim.org/extension/.