Deeprose

 Other than the general resources from TeachAccess, Mozilla Developer Network, Microsoft Learn and so on, I’m not aware of much work in terms of teaching students.

 

Something we have done at Southampton is to set the Accessibility Inspector in Office to run by default on all staff and student machines maintained by the University. In this recorded webinar we go through demonstrating the importance of things like reading order, table headings. We did a previous one about writing alternative text for complex images like charts and graphs.

 

We also run a community of practice for digital accessibility and have done sessions about meaningful links, heading styles, talking about disability and so on. This has a few students within it who asked to join. We’re also working with our Students Union to help them promote digital accessibility, although this is more of a slow burn at the moment.

 

One area where we did have success was in recruiting a group of student interns, training them in accessibility and documentation remediation and then getting them to help improve the accessibility of large cohort courses and then leading debriefs with academic staff so they could sustain those improvements. We’ve got a recorded webinar and resources available on that.

 

Finally, I keep all my presentation recordings on my website. You might see something of interest there.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Lit review sequence

Teach Access Repository and Facebook research link

Notes from original proposal