Important new W3C doc with info of interest to the COGA TF

Hi All,

I just reviewed a new W3C doc, "Challenges with Accessibility Guidelines Conformance and Testing, and Approaches for Mitigating Them<https://www.w3.org/TR/accessibility-conformance-challenges/>." It is a tour de force.

Take note of section 5.2.3 Constraints on What is Strictly Testable, quoted below for your convenience.

"Specific problem: Certain success criteria are quite clear and measurable, like color contrast. Others, far less so. The entire principle of understandable is critical for people with cognitive disabilities, yet success criteria intended to support the principle are not easy to test for or clear on how to measure. As a simple example, there is no clear, recent or consistent definition – within any locale or language – on what lower secondary education level means in regard to web content. Language and text content is also not the only challenge among those with cognitive and learning disabilities. Compounding this, most of the existing criteria in support of understanding are designated as AAA, which relatively few organizations attempt to conform with.

Result of problem: The requirement for valid and reliable testability for WCAG success criteria presents a structural barrier to including the needs of people with disabilities whose needs are not strictly testable. Guidance that WCAG working group members would like to include cannot be included. The needs of people with disabilities – especially intellectual and cognitive disabilities – are not being met.

Situation and Priority: Of the 70 new success criteria proposed by the Cognitive Accessibility Task Force to support the needs of people with cognitive and intellectual disabilities, only four to six (depending on interpretation) were added to WCAG 2.1 and only one is in level AA. The remainder are in level AAA, which is rarely implemented. This means user needs are not met.

Opportunity: Multiple research projects and audience feedback have concluded that simpler language is desired and needed for audiences of the guidelines. Clear but flexible criteria with considerations for a wider spectrum of disabilities helps ensure more needs are met."

Also take note of all the people who made this stupendous document. They richly deserve our gratitude.


Editors:

Janina Sajka (Amazon)
Michael Cooper (W3C)

Authors:
Janina Sajka (Amazon)
Peter Korn (Amazon)
Charles Hall

Contributors:
Alastair Campbell (Nomensa)
Laura Carlson (Invited Expert)
Michael Cooper (W3C)
Joe Cronin (Amazon)
Detlev Fischer (Invited Expert)
Charles Hall (Invited Expert)
Andrew Kirkpatrick (Adobe)
Peter Korn (Amazon)
Shawn Lauriat (Google)
David MacDonald (Invited Expert)
Mary Jo Mueller (IBM)
Janina Sajka (Amazon)
Jeanne Spellman (TetraLogical)
Jason White (ETS)


John



John Rochford

University of Massachusetts Medical School

Eunice Kennedy Shriver Center
Director, INDEX Program
Faculty, Family Medicine & Community Health
DisabilityInfo.org<www.DisabilityInfo.org>

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Received on Sunday, 17 May 2020 07:55:30 UTC