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4.6: Workshops and Training Opportunities

  • Page ID
    32678
    • Digital Education Strategies
    • The Chang School
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    sharp-logo-sm.pngYour accessibility resources are beginning to accumulate. You’ve decided to put up a few posters and add an accessibility awareness section to your company’s monthly newsletter.

    One of the things you’d like to do is develop a number of short workshops for staff in specific roles. Since your company distributes many PDF documents, you think this would be a good starting place for developing the workshops. However, you are not an expert in creating accessible PDF documents, so you will need to educate yourself first. You check with the web accessibility auditing firm you communicated with before doing your own informal audit of the company’s website, and it turns out they offer an accessible documents workshop.

    You also realize that the company’s web developers need to be trained as well. While you could give your developers access to the resources you gathered on developing accessible websites, having an expert coach your developers will be a more effective way to get them trained quickly, and it will also give them the opportunity to ask questions, including ones specific to the company’s website and the development processes in place at the company.

    You plan to attend the workshops yourself, keeping an eye open for participants with a particular talent or enthusiasm for the topics being taught, thinking ahead to potential staff who could be recruited to the accessibility committee or to lead future workshops or presentations.

    Training Efforts Can also Help Develop Awareness

    There are a variety of topics related to accessibility that make good one- to three-hour workshops, which teach specific skills and knowledge or raise awareness of accessibility issues. During the early stages of developing digital accessibility business practices in an organization, it may be necessary to bring in an external service to provide training; however, over time, particular staff within the organization may be able to take on the role of instructor. The opportunity to teach topics further helps the trainer build expertise in the topic.

    Here are a few suggestions that could be developed into workshops or lunchtime presentations:

    Accessible Document Authoring

    Audience: Office staff and others

    Topics: Creating accessible Microsoft Word documents, converting Word documents to PDF, and using Adobe Acrobat Pro to make PDFs accessible

    How People with Disabilities Use the Web

    Audience: Everyone

    Topics: Meet a person who is blind, gain disability awareness, navigate the Web with a screen reader, review assistive technologies, and experience barriers firsthand

    Basic Web Accessibility

    Audience: Web content authors and developers

    Topics: Introducing the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG), common accessibility barriers and their solutions, accessibility principles, and success criteria and techniques

    Advanced Web Accessibility with WAI-ARIA

    Audience: Web developers

    Topics: Static vs. dynamic WAI-ARIA, JavaScript libraries, landmarks and roles, WAI-ARIA best practices

    Toolkit: For more advanced web interaction training for your organization’s web developers have them review the ARIA Workshop.

    Web Accessibility Auditing

    Audience: Web developers and web content authors

    Topics: Automated testing, manual testing, screen reader testing, user testing, and types of audits and reports

    Toolkit: For more advanced training for your organization’s web developers on accessibility auditing practices, enrol them in Professional Web Accessibility Auditing Made Easy.

    Multimedia Captioning

    Audience: Web content developers, video production staff, everyone

    Topics: Live versus asynchronous captions, open versus closed captions, Amara caption editor, YouTube captioning tools, captioning tools in other media authoring tools, captioning standards, captioning services, and described video


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