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How to Design for Accessibility: for UX Designers (WCAG 2.2) 

  • Offered byUDEMY

How to Design for Accessibility: for UX Designers (WCAG 2.2)
 at 
UDEMY 
Overview

Boost your UI/UX designing career by understanding of the fundamentals and application of WCAG 2.2

Duration

7 hours

Total fee

455

Mode of learning

Online

Difficulty level

Beginner

Credential

Certificate

How to Design for Accessibility: for UX Designers (WCAG 2.2)
 at 
UDEMY 
Highlights

  • Earn a Certificate of completion from Udemy
  • Get a 30 days money back guarantee on the course
  • Learn from 42 articles and 19 downloadable resources
Details Icon

How to Design for Accessibility: for UX Designers (WCAG 2.2)
 at 
UDEMY 
Course details

Skills you will learn
Who should do this course?
  • For UX Designers
  • For Product Designers
  • For UI Designers
  • For Aspiring Designers
  • For Developers who design
What are the course deliverables?
  • How to specifically design for accessibility (the essentials for designers - UX, UI, and Product)
  • The top 51 best practices and strategies for designing for accessibility (plus usability & SEO)
  • Accessible color contrast & color independence
  • Accessible wording - Verb or noun, short or medium labels, are "read more" links bad, and more
  • Accessible styling - Border radius, capitalization, fill & color, shadow & elevation, competition, proximity
More about this course
  • This course is a compilation of concrete how-tos that you simply will not find in other online accessibility courses
  • The best practices are backed by expert sources and the design advice has been heavily-researched for accuracy and peer-reviewed by seasoned accessibility specialists

How to Design for Accessibility: for UX Designers (WCAG 2.2)
 at 
UDEMY 
Curriculum

Getting Started

Story: Why Accessibility Matters

Course Feedback Form

Accessibility Intro

Who Is Accessibility About

A Remarkable Glimpse into The Lives of 10 People

5 Astounding Stats That Reveal Just How Many People Accessibility Includes

Disabilities Can Be Situational, Temporary, Or Permanent

Use My Top 4 Pro Tips

Busting 5 Accessibility Myths

The Impressive Business Case for Accessibility: 5 Differentiating Biz Drivers

Is There A List of Guidelines You Can Follow to Avoid Legal Trouble?

Are There ?Accessibility Police??

Who on Your Team Should Be Taking Responsibility for Ensuring Accessibility?

Accessibility Versus: Inclusive Design, Universal Design, and Design For All

The Story of How I Learned When to Test for Accessibility (As a Designer)

How To Test for Accessibility: The Best Method

How To Test for Accessibility: Top Tools

Section Close Out

Color Contrast

Color Contrast Vitals

Did You Know...

Experience It: Red-Green

Update: Where did the "NoCoffee Vision Simulator" go?

Experience It: Blue-Yellow

Experience It: No Color

Tool For Building An Accessible Color Palette

How to Check Color Contrast? For Virtual Reality, Apps, Software, Websites, etc.

Example: UI Elements

Section 3 Quiz

Section 3 Action Summary

Course Feedback Form

Color Independence

How to Check for Color Independence?

Example: Errors

Example: Current Menu Item

Example: Links

Example: Progress Tracker

Example: Charts

Example: Graphs

Example: Other Data Visualizations

Summary: Color Independent Data Visualizations

Activity: Transit Route Map

Combining Tactics

Color Dependence in Gaming & Virtual Reality

Section 4 Quiz (4 questions)

Section 4 Action Summary

Wording Interactive Elements

How to Tell If the Signifiers You Design Are Signifying the Things You Want

What Are ?Norman Doors?

UX History: Experience Design Dates As Far Back As 4000 BC With Feng Shui

Moving into Usability Territory: Key Players

3 Core Aspects To Design For (When Creating Interactive Elements)

Button Wording Best Practices

Why Avoid ?Read More? Links (And The Like)

Link Wording Best Practices

Wording Alternatives (For Buttons or Links)

Section 5 Quiz (3 questions)

Section 5 Action Summary

Button Guessing Game & Intro to 7 Techniques for Signifying ?Clickability?

Technique 1: Shape and Consistency (Button or Not)

Technique 2: Border Radius (Personality)

Technique 3: Fill and Color (Hierarchy)

Technique 4: Shadow (Elevation)

Technique 6: Proximity (Breathability, Relation, Touch Targets)

Technique 7: Label Capitalization (Tone of Voice)

Things to Reserve for Buttons

When To Be Consistent

When To Be Inconsistent (aka Distinct)

When To Be Similar

Deciding Between The Three (Consistent, Distinct, Similar)

Section 6 Quiz (4 questions)

Section 6 Action Summary

Faculty Icon

How to Design for Accessibility: for UX Designers (WCAG 2.2)
 at 
UDEMY 
Faculty details

Liz Brown
Liz Brown works to improve the usability, accessibility, and overall glamour of websites, apps, and software and she does this for a living. Her job is to make outdated, ugly, usability messes into seamlessly flowing, delightful, user-friendly beauties

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