Web Accessibility Initiative
The World Wide Web Consortium 's Web Accessibility Initiative is an effort to improve the accessibility of the World Wide Web for people with disabilities. People with disabilities may encounter difficulties when using computers generally, but also on the Web. Since people with disabilities often require non-standard devices and browsers, making websites more accessible also benefits a wide range of user agents and devices, including mobile devices, which have limited resources.
The W3C launched the Web Accessibility Initiative in 1997 with endorsement by The White House and W3C members. It has several working groups and interest groups that work on guidelines, technical reports, educational materials and other documents that relate to the several different components of web accessibility. These components include web content, web browsers and media players, authoring tools, and evaluation tools.
Organization
WAI develops guidelines and other technical reports through the same process as other parts of the W3C. Like other W3C initiatives, the WAI consists of several working groups and Special interest groups, each with its own focus. Only working groups can produce technical reports that become W3C recommendations. A working group can sometimes delegate specific work to a task force, which then presents its results back to the working group for approval. Interest groups may produce reports, but not recommendations.Each of these types of groups can have one or more mailing lists. They meet through conference calls at regular intervals and sometimes use web-based surveys to collect input or comments from participants. They can also meet face to face.
In 1997 Judy Brewer has been the director of the WAI. In this role she has championed improving accessibility of the web for people with disabilities and older users.
Authoring Tool Accessibility Guidelines Working Group (AUWG)
The Authoring Tool Accessibility Guidelines Working Group develops guidelines, techniques and supporting resources for tools that create web content, ranging from desktop HTML editors to content management systems.The accessibility requirements apply to two types of things: the user interface on the one hand, and the content produced by the tool on the other.
The working group consists of representatives from organizations that produce authoring tools, researchers, and other accessibility experts.
The working group produced the Authoring Tool Accessibility Guidelines 1.0 in 2000 and completed Authoring Tool Accessibility Guidelines 2.0 in 2015. A supporting document, Implementing ATAG 2.0, provides additional explanation, examples and resources for ATAG 2.0. It also published a document on Selecting and Using Authoring Tools for Web Accessibility.
Education and Outreach Working Group (EOWG)
The Education and Outreach Working Group develops materials for training and education on Web accessibility. This working group has produced documents on a wide range of subjects, including:- Accessibility Features of CSS
- Curriculum for Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 1.0
- Evaluating Web Sites for Accessibility, a suite of documents about subjects such as conformance evaluation, evaluation approaches for specific contexts, involving users in web accessibility evaluation, and selecting web accessibility evaluation tools
- Planning Web Accessibility Training
- Developing a Web Accessibility Business Case for Your Organization
- How People with Disabilities Use the Web, a document that describes various fictitious characters with disabilities and how they use the Web in different scenarios
- many introduction pages on the WAI website.
The Education and Outreach Working Group can also review working drafts produced by other WAI working groups.
Evaluation and Repair Tools Working Group (ERT WG)
The Evaluation and Repair Tools Working Group develops technical specifications that support the accessibility evaluation and repair of Web sites. It also maintains a database of tools for evaluating Web sites and for making them more accessible.The working group consists mainly of developers of such tools and researchers.
Current work focuses on
- Evaluation and Report Language : a language for expressing evaluation reports in a machine-readable way
- HTTP Vocabulary in RDF, which specifies how HTTP requests and responses can be expressed in RDF
- Representing Content in RDF, which specifies how content can be represented in RDF
- Pointer Methods in RDF, early work on how locations in and parts of online documents can be expressed in RDF.
Protocols & Formats Working Group (PFWG)
a paper on natural language usage for people with cognitive disabilities,
and initial work on accessibility requirements for XML-based markup languages.
In 2006, the working group started development of a set of document and specifications for accessible rich internet applications: WAI-ARIA.
Research and Development Interest Group (RDIG)
The goal of the Research and Development Interest Group is- to increase the incorporation of accessibility considerations into research on Web technologies, and
- to identify projects researching Web accessibility and suggest research questions that may contribute to new projects.
User Agent Accessibility Guidelines Working Group (UAWG)
The User Agent Accessibility Guideline Working Group develops guidelines, techniques and other documents to promote the accessibility of user agents: browsers and plug-ins.The working group consists mainly of organizations that develop user agents, researchers, and other accessibility experts.
UAWG published User Agent Accessibility Guidelines 2.0 in December 2015. Supporting documentation includes: UAAG 2.0 Reference and UAAG Mobile Examples. The working group published User Agent Accessibility Guidelines 1.0 as a W3C Recommendation in 2002.
WAI Interest Group (WAI IG)
The WAI Interest Group is an open group with a mailing list to which anyone can subscribe. W3C staff post announcements of new WAI documents to this mailing list to invite reviews and comments. Members of the list also post announcements of relevant events and publications, and ask advice on issues related to web accessibility.The language of the mailing list is English; there are no parallel mailing lists in other languages.
Web Content Accessibility Guidelines Working Group (WCAG WG)
The Web Content Accessibility Guidelines Working Group produces guidelines, techniques and other supporting documents relating to the accessibility of Web content. Web content refers to any information you may find on a Web site: text, images, forms, sound, video, etcetera, regardless whether these were produced on the server side or on the client side. Thus, the guidelines also apply to rich internet applications.The working group consists of representatives from industry, accessibility consultancies, universities, organizations that represent end users, and other accessibility experts.
The working group published the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 1.0 as W3C Recommendation in 1999, followed by techniques documents in 2000.
In 2001, the working group started work on WCAG 2.0, which became a W3C Recommendation on 11 December 2008.
WAI Coordination Group
The WAI Coordination Group co-ordinates that activities of the WAI working groups. Its activities are not public.Guidelines and technical reports
Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG)
The Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 1.0 were published as a W3C Recommendation on 5 May 1999. A supporting document, Techniques for Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 1.0 was published as a W3C Note on 6 November 2000.WCAG 1.0 is a set of guidelines for making web content more accessible to persons with disabilities. They also help make web content more usable for other devices, including mobile devices.
The Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 1.0 are recognized as a de facto standard and have served as a basis for legislation and evaluation methodologies in many countries.
The WCAG working group published WCAG 2.0 as a Recommendation on 11 December 2008. WCAG 2.0 is based on very different requirements from WCAG 1.0:
- the guidelines needed to be technology-neutral, whereas WCAG 1.0 was strongly based on HTML and CSS;
- the guidelines needed to be worded as testable statements instead of instructions to authors.
In 2018, the WCAG working group published . This remains fundamentally similar to the guidance in WCAG 2.0, with some additional recommendations made in particular areas:
- Mobile device accessibility
- Low vision users.
Authoring Tool Accessibility Guidelines (ATAG)
ATAG is a set of guidelines for developers of any kind of authoring tool for Web content: simple HTML editors, tools that export content for use on the Web, tools that produce multimedia, content management systems, learning management systems, social media, etc..
The goal is for developers to create tools that:
- are accessible to authors regardless of disability;
- produce accessible content by default;
- support and encourage authors to create accessible content.
List of authoring tools looking to implement ATAG 2.0:
Authoring Tool Accessibility Guidelines 1.0 was published in 2000 by the Authoring Tool Accessibility Guidelines Working Group.
User Agent Accessibility Guidelines (UAAG)
Developed by the User Agent Accessibility Guidelines Working Group, the UAAG 1.0 became a W3C Recommendation on 17 December 2002. The UAAG is a set of guidelines for user agent developers aimed at making the user agent accessible to users with disabilities. Techniques for User Agent Accessibility Guidelines 1.0 was published as a W3C Note on the same day; it provides techniques for satisfying the checkpoints defined in UAAG 1.0.Working group members also produced other supporting documents, including initial notes on How to evaluate a user agent for conformance to UAAG 1.0; this document was not formally approved by the working group.
No user agents have been reported as fully conforming to UAAG 1.0.
The working group is currently working on a new version of the guidelines. The first public draft of User Agent Accessibility Guidelines 2.0 was published on 12 March 2008.