
The Business
Problem
California State
University, San
Bernardino (CSUSB)
is one of 23
campuses in
California and
part of the
largest public
state university
system in the
country. It has
a student body
of more than
16,000 and 480
full-time
faculty. Aside
from the nearly
20,000 people
that comprise
their faculty,
staff and
students, the
university
serves two
counties with a
total population
of more than 3.5
million people.
Including the
number of people
who access their
Web sites from
around the
world, the total
world reach of
the university
Web sites is
almost 4 million
people. More and
more it is
becoming “the”
source of
electronic
information.
The CSU-SB
accessibility
project was
prompted by an
accessibility
audit of
University Web
sites by the
California State
University
Chancellor's
office. Within a
few months of
the initial
audit, the
university
drafted and
passed a Web
Page
Accessibility
Policy,
requiring all
administrative
Web pages to be
made accessible.
The university
incorporated the
Section 508 Web
Accessibility
Standards into
its Web policy.
Prior to
implementation
of the Web
policy,
accessibility
issues were
handled by
either the
Services to
Student with
Disabilities
office, the
Assistive
Computing
Resource Center
or by individual
faculty members.
Issues of
inaccessible Web
pages were
handled on a
purely voluntary
basis and prior
to the
implementation
of the policy,
no person or
group was
identified as an
expert in this
area.
The Department
of Academic
Computing &
Media was
charged with
taking
responsibility
for implementing
the plan to
bring all
administrative
Web pages into
compliance with
all 508
Guidelines. They
created
workshops to
assist
administrative
offices, campus
departments, and
their respective
webmasters in
achieving
compliance. One
of the first
items needed was
a tool or set of
tools for
verifying the
current
compliance
levels with
Section 508 and
a tool to allow
Web developers
to check their
own work. They
choose
HiSoftware’s
AccMonitor and
AccVerify
products to meet
these needs.
“We purchased
AccVerify from
HiSoftware to
allow our campus
webmasters and
managers to test
their web pages.
The software is
made available
to anyone
attending our
ongoing Web Page
Accessibility
Compliance
Workshop;
initially
offered once a
week and now
offered
monthly,” said
Michael
Casadonte, Web
Page
Accessibility
Project
Coordinator.
“Beginning in
March, 2004, we
compiled a
quarterly report
on the status of
each web site.
This report is
distributed to
our vice
presidents,
deans and the
president.”
The Solution
The CSUSB group
purchased
AccVerify and
AccRepair from
HiSoftware along
with AccMonitor
Server.
AccVerify
provides for the
verification of
accessibility
policy and
standards
required for Web
sites under the
Rehabilitation
Act Section 508
and W3CŪ
Priority 1
guidelines. As
information is
added to a Web
site, AccVerify
reports on
whether all
elements are in
compliance.
AccRepair uses
the reporting
and verification
components of
AccVerify to
launch a repair
“wizard”
interface, which
prompts the user
to correct
accessibility
errors.
AccRepair also
uses a library
that “learns” as
repairs are
made.
Corrections of
the same error
(for example,
associating
"alt-text"
behind an image)
need only be
made once. The
library then
stores the
corrected
information and
auto-corrects
the images each
time a page is
encountered with
that image.
AccRepair and
AccVerify are
available as
integrated
Microsoft
FrontPage
applications.
Both products
are also
available as
automated
server-based
solutions that
minimize labor
required to
achieve and
maintain
accessible Web
sites as new
content is
created.
AccMonitor is an
automated
accessibility
testing solution
for Web sites or
for use in
conjunction with
Intranet Servers
or File Servers.
Using a crawler,
AccMonitor tests
sites for
compliance with
Section 508 and
W3C
accessibility
standards.
AccMonitor
spiders, or
crawls over,
entire Web sites
and reports on
their
accessibility
status.
AccMonitor
particularly
benefits
organizations
that need to
monitor multiple
servers that
host information
via the World
Wide Web.
AccMonitor is a
server solution
that is designed
to run with no
user interaction
once configured.
AccMonitor can
be scheduled to
crawl Web sites
daily, weekly,
or monthly. It
also allows
users to log-on
for on demand
reports on the
accessibility
status of their
Web pages.
HiSoftware’s
solutions
provided the
comprehensive
testing and
reporting
features that
the University
required through
a simple to use
interface.
Additionally,
HiSoftware’s
applications
provided the
greatest
flexibility in
user-driven and
automated
reporting, and
also provided
the flexibility
for Enterprise
Wide deployment
and mass
distribution.
The Bottom Line
The University
did a careful
and
comprehensive
analysis of all
of the leading
accessibility
testing tools on
the market
before choosing
HiSoftware’s
solutions.
According to
Casadonte, “We
chose HiSoftware
because their
presentation was
very impressive.
Their technical
staff was
knowledgeable
and clear about
what the
software could
do. We felt that
HiSoftware’s
company and
software
solutions
catered to our
needs as an
educational
institution.
They did not
talk to us as if
we are concerned
about profits,
clientele and
products that we
sell. Oh yes,
and we were also
offered a great
deal that fit
into our
budget!”
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