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Whether looking for the latest news, chatting with friends, researching
or even attending class, surfing the web has become a way of life.
So imagine logging onto your favorite web site and not being able
to see the content, hear the audio or use text boxes. Because most
web sites are not designed to work with accessibility tools, this
is the sad reality facing many people with disabilities. St. Edward's
University and the University of Texas at Austin are working with
the nonprofit group Knowbility to help change that reality. The
two schools, which will jointly host the annual Accessibility Internet
Rally for Universities (AIR-U) in October, have issued a challenge
to other colleges and universities to get involved. AIR-U brings
campus webmasters together to create interactive web sites that
are fully accessible to Internet users with disabilities, and awards
prizes to the sites that best meet the challenge.
To
make the challenge easier this year, interested participants are
invited to attend a two-day training conference on Wednesday, May
28, and Thursday, May 29, at the
St. Edward's University Professional Education Center (PEC).
The training conference, which is free for teams who are also signed
up for the AIR-U challenge, features classes in basic accessible
web design, as well as advanced classes in the accessible use of
multimedia and coding techniques. Representatives from IBM, Macromedia,
Adobe and WGBH will hold workshops to teach developers how to use
the accessibility features of their products. Teams have until mid-October
to create accessible designs for their own web sites, which will
be judged based on accessibility features. Winners will be announced
during an awards ceremony on Thursday, Oct. 23. Registration information
is available at www.knowbility.org/air-university.
Knowbility
is a national non-profit organization whose mission is to support
the independence of children, youth and adults with disabilities
through barrier-free technology application. For more information
visit www.knowbility.org.
The
University of Texas at Austin, the largest component of The University
of Texas System, is a major research university and home to more
than 48,000 students, 2,700 faculty and 17,000 staff members. After
3 years of emphasis on accessibility, including AIR participation,
a study released in March 2003 found that UT's overall web site
accessibility far exceeded that of any other University in the nation.
Founded
by the Congregation of Holy Cross, St. Edward's University is a
private Catholic, liberal arts university of more than 4,250 students
in Austin, Texas.
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