Class Central is learner-supported. When you buy through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.

Pluralsight

Making a Web Form Accessible

via Pluralsight

Overview

Save Big on Coursera Plus. 7,000+ courses at $160 off. Limited Time Only!
Web accessibility is more straightforward than you'd think. This course starts with an inaccessible web form and steps through each of the changes necessary to make it accessible, including an introduction to testing with free screen reader software.

Web accessibility can seem like a daunting topic, but it's actually fairly simple to make improvements and meet the guidelines with some small changes to your HTML and CSS. In this course, Making a Web Form Accessible, you'll be starting with a fully-functional, but inaccessible web form for booking a room at a hotel. You'll walk through the minor changes required to make it fully accessible. You don't need to have any prior experience of making a website accessible, just a good understanding of HTML, CSS, and JavaScript/jQuery and you're ready to go. At each step, you'll be shown what the issue is, a straightforward way of resolving it, and the improved outcome. Never used a screen reader before? You'll see how to get started with the free NVDA screen reader to see your site from a different perspective. You'll also learn about WAI-ARIA (a specific kind of HTML) and how to fix the form validation. By the end of this course, you'll know how to create a web form that is vastly more usable for everyone, and still just as stylish as when you started.

Syllabus

  • Getting Started with Keyboard Accessibility 23mins
  • Improving Our Form for Screen Reader Users 23mins
  • Using WAI-ARIA to Provide More Context 19mins
  • Fixing the Form Validation 13mins
  • Adding Some Final Improvements 27mins

Taught by

Fiona Holder

Reviews

4.9 rating at Pluralsight based on 79 ratings

Start your review of Making a Web Form Accessible

Never Stop Learning.

Get personalized course recommendations, track subjects and courses with reminders, and more.

Someone learning on their laptop while sitting on the floor.