Digital Accessibility Group

From DLF Wiki
Revision as of 09:45, 16 March 2020 by 71.175.74.123 (talk)

The DLF Digital Accessibility Working Group exists to explore issues related to ensuring that the digital resources within information organizations meet the needs of disabled users and staff. This includes:

  • Surveying digital accessibility in GLAM organizations
  • Facilitating information sharing and networking
  • Producing and collecting resources and best practices for executing accessibility work

Means of Communication

Structure

The group consists of ongoing subgroups that focus on broad themes in accessibility practice in information organizations, as well as more area/technology specific subgroups.

Policy and Workflows

The Policy and Workflows subgroup will focus on specific functional areas within information organizations. This group will do research and produce deliverables related to best practices for employment, purchasing, production, leadership, and oversight within these organizational areas.

IT and Development

The IT and Development subgroup will focus on specific software, hardware, and development practices associated with information organizations. Once a list of technologies associated with specific areas is compiled, they will begin addressing the accessibility concerns of specific entries.

Advocacy and Continuing Education

The Advocacy and Continuing Education subgroup will focus on providing resources, tools, and skills necessary for librarians, archivists, records managers, and other GLAM professionals to advocate for, as well as support accessibility within their organizations. This group will share information pertaining to:

  • Guidelines for web accessibility, such as WCAG 2.x
  • Responding to existing and emerging barriers faced by disabled persons
  • Advocacy and Outreach work
  • Forum Preparation
  • Ethical Use of open source products, including assistive technologies
  • Other areas as determined by the group

Values

This group adheres to DLF’s Code of Conduct while also supporting the following group values:

  • Equitable access to technology for disabled people is a right.
  • Inclusive design is good design.
  • Changes must be supported on a cultural and structural level.

Materials produced by this group will aim to be WCAG AA compliant (for more information see “Guidelines for producing documentation”). However, should you encounter barriers to accessing any of our resources, please email jasmine.l.clark@temple.edu.

This group also acknowledges the difference in ways that disability is described and discussed. As it pertains to person-first (person with a disability) vs. identity-first (disabled person) language, it is important to this group that it be acknowledged that society plays a heavy role in disabling people, while also avoiding the implication that disability is inherently negative. For this reason, identity first language will be used in our documentation. However, it is important to listen to disabled people when deciding which is appropriate to use in individual contexts. For more information on this debate, feel free to visit these resources on the subject:

Expressed Areas of Interest

  • Institutional Repositories (DSpace, Bepress, etc.)
  • Publishing
  • Reference management systems (Zotero, etc.)
  • Digital Scholarship (Research data, tools, visualizations)
  • Library Systems
  • Archival Discovery Systems
  • Databases and Vendors
  • Digitization workflows for metadata & publishing to better conform to digital accessibility standards
  • DAMS (CONTENTdm, Islandora, etc.)
  • Workflows for archived Web pages and other born-digital archived material and formats
  • Recorded tours of library sites using different assistive tech
  • Virtual Reality (3D technologies, including Makerspace equipment)


Documentation