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Auditing the accessibility of electronic resources.George, Sarah, Clement, Ellie, Hudson, Grace, Asif, M. 02 February 2015 (has links)
Yes / Since the UK’s 2001 Special Educational Needs and Disability Act (SENDA, 2001), academic libraries have had a legal
duty to provide all students with information in a form accessible to them, an obligation strengthened by the 2010
Equality Act (c15). Crucially, the latter duty covered readers with all kinds of impairments, not just visual impairment,
and thus covers a huge range of needs for an enormous number of individuals. Libraries have put a huge amount
of time and effort into providing documents in accessible format (alt-format) but obviously it is preferable for both
libraries and readers if the documents are accessible as supplied from the publisher. Electronic resources have the
potential to address many of the accessibility needs of our readers, but concerns have been growing in the HE sector
(see, for instance, JISCTechdis, 2013) that the way in which e-resources are delivered actually renders them, in some
cases, less accessible. This paper describes a project undertaken by the University of Bradford library to systematically
assess the accessibility of our electronic resources, and gives recommendations for others wishing to do the same.
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Auditing the accessibility of electronic resources.George, Sarah, Clement, Ellie, Hudson, Grace 02 February 2015 (has links)
Yes / This paper describes a project undertaken by the
University of Bradford library to assess systematically
the accessibility of our electronic resources,
and gives recommendations for others wishing to
do the same with their collections.
Since the 2001 Special Educational Needs and
Disability Act (SENDA), academic libraries in the
UK have had a legal duty to provide all students
with information in a form accessible to them, an
obligation strengthened by the 2010 Equality Act
(c. 15) to include all kinds of impairments, not just
visual.
The change in information sources from print to
electronic has raised further challenges to providing
access to information for all library users.
Electronic resources have the potential to address
many of the accessibility needs of our readers, but
concerns have been growing in the higher education
sector that the way in which e-resources are
delivered can make them less accessible.
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