- From: Andrew Arch <andrew@w3.org>
- Date: Mon, 26 Jul 2010 15:18:33 +0100
- To: wai-eo-editors <wai-eo-editors@w3.org>
Forwarded with permission for the record. Andrew -------- Original Message -------- Subject: Re: Review request - Developing Websites for Older People Date: Thu, 15 Jul 2010 17:56:54 -0400 From: Michael Cooper <cooper@w3.org> To: Andrew Arch <andrew@w3.org> CC: WAI-AGE <team-wai-age@w3.org>, List WAI GL <w3c-wai-gl@w3.org> References: <4C2A1ECF.1030407@w3.org> Here is some feedback collected from a few members of the WCAG Working Group: Some great research here and an excellent resource/reference for web accessibility advocates overall. Title seems not to be a good match for the document. Reading the title alone, I'd expect it to be a narrative on the challenges faced by individuals who are aging along with some best practices and guidance about how to address them. Given the content, something more along the lines of "How WCAG 2.0 Improves Websites for Older People" or "How WCAG 2.0 Applies to Older People". Currently is organized by WCAG SC. Perhaps for development phase that makes sense, but I suggest it be organized by the types of needs older users have, then show how WCAG SC apply to those under that. Reference to technology-specific techniques seems a bit too particular for this document. They are only one of possibly many ways to meet the need, and I'd hate to exclude by omission. It seems better to refer to some general approach, which itself might include the known technology-specific techniques. References to general techniques perhaps fill that role. In cases where there is a technology-specific technique, does this indicate there wasn't a suitable general technique to reference? Should there be one? Or can the document abstract the technology-specific techniques to get at the overall requirement? Some felt documenting techniques were valuable, but others felt that may be difficult to maintain over time. Michael Andrew Arch wrote: > Hello Michael and Jeanne, > > Thanks for agreeing to seek reviews of this document ("Developing > Websites for Older People: Applying WCAG 2.0" [1]) for us. The document > includes rationale of how the WCAG 2.0 requirements benefit older people > with accessibility needs. We're seeking input from WCAG and UAAG working > groups on these explanations to be sure we've not left any gaps or made > any mis-representations. > > This document, one of the WAI-AGE deliverables [2], is intended to > encourage people developing websites for older users to adopt WAI > guidelines, in particular WCAG 2.0. The need for this became obvious > from the Literature Review [3] which clearly identified that the > accessibility needs of older users could be met by WCAG 2.0 [4], but > that this was not appreciated by most developers or researchers. The > document is also intended to provide some guidance for people (eg > researchers) who might be considering developing their own sets of > guidelines (as many have done in the past) to reference WCAG 2.0 for > the accessibility needs. > > The draft document "Developing Websites for Older People: Applying WCAG > 2.0", after some introduction, discusses WCAG 2.0 GLs and SC from the > perspective of older people's needs. It also highlights some specific > techniques that should be considered for optimising a site for older > people. > > We started out with cross-references to the Lit Review, but took them > out in favour of a more general reference to that document for people > interested in pursuing our rationales in more depth. However, for > review purposes, numeric references have been left in as it may assist > review. (These numeric references will be removed before publication.) > > Please provide feedback by 19th July, or let me know if you need more > time to review. > > Thanks in anticipation, Andrew > > [1] http://www.w3.org/WAI/EO/Drafts/sites-older-users/ > [2] http://www.w3.org/WAI/WAI-AGE/deliverables.html > [3] http://www.w3.org/TR/wai-age-literature/ > [4] http://www.w3.org/WAI/WAI-AGE/comparative.html > > -- Michael Cooper Web Accessibility Specialist World Wide Web Consortium, Web Accessibility Initiative E-mail cooper@w3.org <mailto:cooper@w3.org> Information Page <http://www.w3.org/People/cooper/>
Received on Monday, 26 July 2010 14:19:03 UTC