Accessibility tools
Accessibility evaluation tools are a handy resource for anyone who wants to ensure that the site they are developing meets established accessibility standards.
It is very important to keep in mind that no evaluation tool has been developed that can completely replace human testing.
Information and resources
Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 2.0 (choose Level AA Success Criteria)
Council of Ontario Universities Toolkit (for Section 14)
UX Foundations: Accessibility with Derek Featherstone (Lynda.com)
Browser accessibility functions
Use the browser’s accessibility functions (e.g. text size, zoom, no page style, navigating with the keyboard) to determine whether or not the site responds as expected to those functions.
Add-ons and toolbars
Extend the capability of Chrome/Firefox to help you easily find accessibility issues.
Accessibility checkers
Single page and document evaluation tools.
WebAIM WAVE: single page checker (we recommend the WAVE Toolbar).
AChecker: single page checker
Video accessibility
Web accessibility tip: Caption videos in YouTube and Vimeo
YouTube - University of Waterloo
to edit YouTube captions on the University of Waterloo channel you need to have admin access or send a transcript with the video to the Communications Coordinator/Community Engagement.
Edit YouTube captions (YouTube help site)
Rev.com - transcription, captions, and translation services
Document accessibility
Web accessibility tip: Create HTML web pages rather than documents
Creating accessible PDF's (WebAIM site)
Creating Accessible Documents in Microsoft Office (LinkedIn.com)
Create accessible PDFs - Office Support (Microsoft site)
Creating accessible Word files (Microsoft site)
Creating accessible PowerPoint files (Microsoft site)
Creating accessible Excel files (Microsoft site)
Writing for the web
Color analyzers
Web accessibility tip: Keep colour contrast in mind for images with text
WCAG Contrast checker: Firefox extension checks colour contrast
Snook.ca Colour Contrast Check Tool
Assistive technologies
Fangs Screen Reader Emulator Firefox extension screen reader simulator generates text similar to what would be read by a screen reader, allowing a sighted user to better understand the experience that a screen reader user would have.
NonVisual Desktop Access (NVDA): an open-source screen reader for Windows. Widely used in the visually-imparied community. Excellent for testing.
Code validators
HTML Validator validates all HTML to ensure it follows the standard.
HTML Validator add-on for Firefox verifies that web pages have correct syntax.