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Village e-Learning Consultancy | |
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Tools, techniques and technologies 07717 341 622 |
Useful |
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| Accessibility |
Resources |
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| What we do | The
Special Educational Needs and Disability Act 2001 (SENDA: Part 4 of
the Disability discrimination Act - DDA) places obligations on all
educational establishments:
Education Providers' Responsibilities TechDis provides educational institutions with help and advice. John Rousell's SimDis
web pages can also be found on the TechDis web site. |
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| Terminology | design guidelines | ||
| Resources | Using ILT | ||
| PDA | |||
| What's on? | |||
| Blog |
Web Links |
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| Background | |||
| John's pages provide an interesting and enlightening overview of how people experience various disabilities. They examples are not meant to be an exact representation, but are designed to help those of us who design leaning materials to understand how our design might help or hinder many users - often those we hadn't thought of as disabled. | |||
| Student life | |||
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Two FREE colour wheels for web accessibility |
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| back | TechDis operates on a UK-wide basis and works together with the Education Departments, Funding Councils, key agencies and appropriate intermediaries, to ensure that Universities, Colleges of Further Education and Specialist Colleges are supported fully, and to ensure that all staff have access to relevant and timely advice and appropriate resources, with regard to technology and disability issues. | |
| http://www.techdis.ac.uk | ||
Useful help |
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| User Style Sheet Wizard -
http://www.techdis.ac.uk/getstylesheetwizard The Style Sheet Wizard enables users to create a style sheet which can be used to override the presentation of many HTML-based web pages. They can be extremely powerful in enforcing the way in which the user desires a web page to be presented. You can set options of text font, size and colour, the font colour of hyperlinks etc. The wizard provides a user-friendly way of writing the code for a user style sheet. User Preferences Toolbar - http://www.techdis.ac.uk/gettoolbar The TechDis User Preferences Toolbar has been designed to provide students and staff with a simple way of imposing their accessibility preferences onto potentially any web page. The toolbar also offers a handy zoom function that magnifies the page. The colour and font changes do not persist from page to page but the toolbar does provide the user with a greater sense of control as they can choose when (and when not) to use their preferred presentation style. Web Accessibility Evaluation Tool - http://www.techdis.ac.uk/getwebaccesstool The TechDis Web Accessibility Evaluation Tool is a self-evaluation tool that has been designed to provide website developers with a simple and pragmatic approach to conducting an internal or self-evaluation of a web page. This tool is suitable for use with institutional websites, personal academic homepages and other information sites. |
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| back | The National Star College is an independent specialist college working with learners who have physical disabilities and associated learning difficulties | |
| http://www.natstar.ac.uk/ | ||
Useful help |
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| Accessibility - http://www.natstar.ac.uk/Accessibility_2.asp
The National Star Accessibility pages are offered to help users get the most out of the National Star web site - but everyone can gain an insight to facilities offered by Microsoft software which make usability that little bit easier - or personal. Well done National Star. |
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| http://www.engsc.ac.uk/er/dis/pda.asp What about PDAs? |

| back | Colour wheels | |
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Once, long ago, monitors could
display only a restricted number of colours without dithering or
other colour discrepancies. The traditional solution to this
problem was to use a restricted colour palette known as the
Netscape 216 colours, browser-safe colours or the web-safe
colours. In hexadecimal form, the web-safe colours are composed
of three pairs of identical hexadecimal digits selected from
00,
33,
66,
99,
cc,
and ff;
for example, #000000
is black, and #cc0000
is red.
Time passed, as it so frequently does, and new hardware supported thousands or millions of colours. People grew tired of the old 216 colours. They wanted more earth tones, more variety. The web-smart colours are those 4096 colours composed of any three pairs of identical hexadeximal digits (0-9 and a-f), such as #dd1188. The unsafe colours are the full set of 16,777,216 hexadecimal colours, featuring any colour between #000000 and #ffffff, such as #5a832d. (from http://www.ficml.org/jemimap/style/color/index.php#about) [feedback form] Use the colour wheels in conjunction with a cascading style sheet - CSS. E.G. See TechDis |
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Useful help |
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| http://www.ficml.org/jemimap/style/color/wheel.html | ||
| http://www.gmazzocato.altervista.org/colorwheel/wheel.php | ||
| Many thanks to both authors for offering these sites free for use by others. |