- From: Kynn Bartlett <kynn@idyllmtn.com>
- Date: Thu, 04 Oct 2001 11:56:19 -0700
- To: w3c-wai-gl@w3.org
Hi everyone, what follows is a message from a student in my D201 accessibility course, who has ADD. One of the reading assignments is the "how people use the web" draft, and she has specific comments on how difficult she found it to read. In addition, she has comments on the user interface for the online course. --Kynn ADD Problem: TOO MUCH TOO FAST One of the required reading urls is an excellent example of something that is *very* difficult for someone with Attention Deficit. The URL: http://www.w3.org/WAI/EO/Drafts/PWD-Use-Web/Overview.html If you look at the article, there are links throughout the text as examples of common problems for the disabled. However, for someone with ADD, this makes it extremely difficult to keep focused on the topic at hand: there is just too much too fast. You are reading along and see a link so you click it which takes you to a different page. People without ADD can do this and come back and continue reading. Someone who has Attention deficit gets lost and confused *very* easily going back and forth among the pages just to complete a sentence. It is a nightmare to keep up with it all to say the least. A better way: put the example in a special section at the *end* of the thought, not a link in the middle of the sentence. Also, making the page printable is very helpful: it takes the distraction of being able to click out of the picture. In fact, *this* web site [the course web site] has too many different places to store information: It'd be easier for me to see all the reading material on one page under different topics instead of having to go to different pages to get all the information. For example: Read Chapters 1 & 4 Hands On 1. Disable the Javascript 2. bla 3. bla Additional Resources 1. URL 2. URL 3. URL News Articles URL Review Questions 1. 2. 3. That way, all the information is in one place, and I don't have to dig for it. The key to it is: THERE IS A PROCESS TO FOLLOW. The more a person with ADD has to dig, the more likely he/ she is to get lost. It is incredible frustrating: there *must* be a clear process to go through. -- Kynn Bartlett <kynn@idyllmtn.com> http://kynn.com/ Technical Developer Liaison, Reef http://www.reef.com/ Chief Technologist, Idyll Mountain Internet http://idyllmtn.com/ Online Instructor, Accessible Web Design http://kynn.com/+d201
Received on Thursday, 4 October 2001 14:58:27 UTC