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    Accessible for All

    Accessibility

    The Office of Information Technology, serving the University of Colorado Denver and Anschutz Medical Campus, strives to ensure that people with disabilities have equal, available and reliable access to the organization’s services, digital content, and technologies. Our promise encompasses our offerings made available through both technology and our people.

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    Resources

    View tools and resources that support accessible web development. The list was compiled with input from developers across the University of Washington, and is a work in progress.

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    Policies, Laws & Standards

    The university complies with federal laws and policies regarding accessibility to ensure that all students, faculty, and staff have equal opportunity. Review the policies and laws here.

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    Designing Online Courses

    It is important to ensure the IT components of a course are accessible to and usable by all students. This includes documents, videos, and websites. Click here for help designing an accessible course.

    What Is Accessibility?

    Accessibility is the degree to which a product, device, program, service, resource, or environment is available to a given user.  If a building on campus has a wheelchair ramp leading to its main entrance, that entrance is accessible to wheelchair users. If a lecture includes sign language interpreters, that lecture is accessible to attendees who are deaf or hard of hearing and who understand sign language.





    What Is Accessible Technology?

    Accessible technology is a technology that has been designed in a way so that it can be accessed by all users. This includes electronic documents, websites, software, hardware, video, audio, and other technologies. People who interact with technology are extremely diverse. They have a wide variety of characteristics, and we cannot assume that they’re all using a traditional monitor for output, or keyboard and mouse for input. Consider these users:

    • Most individuals who are blind use either audible output (products called screen readers that read web content using synthesized speech), or tactile output (a refreshable Braille device).
    • Individuals with learning disabilities such as dyslexia may also use audible output. This is often referred to as Text-to-Speech (TTS).
    • Individuals with low vision may use screen magnification software that allows them to zoom into a portion of the visual screen.
    • Many others with less-than-perfect eyesight may enlarge the font on websites using standard browser functions, such as Ctrl + in Windows or Command + in Mac OS X.
    • Individuals with fine motor impairments may be unable to use a mouse, and instead rely exclusively on keyboard commands, or use assistive technologies such as speech recognition, head pointers, mouth sticks, or eye-gaze tracking systems.
    • Individuals who are deaf or hard of hearing are unable to access audio content, so video needs to be captioned and audio needs to be transcribed.

    Individuals may be using mobile devices including phones, tablets, or other devices, which means they’re using a variety of screen sizes and a variety of gestures or other user interfaces for interacting with their devices and accessing the content.

    Accessible technology works for all of these users, and countless others not mentioned.

    Making Technology Accessible 

    This website serves as the CU Denver and CU Anschutz information hub about accessible technology. Accessible technology includes electronic documents, websites, videos, software applications, and hardware devices that can be used effectively by everyone, including students, faculty, staff, and visitors with disabilities. The CU Denver and CU Anschutz community are collectively responsible for assuring the technologies we choose, use, and create are fully accessible.

    Below you will find links to a few additional starting points for learning more about IT accessibility.

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    Creating Accessible Documents

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    Developing Accessible Websites

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    Creating Accessible Videos

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    Procuring Accessible Information Technology

    OIT Accessibility Guidelines

    The University of Colorado Denver and the University of Colorado Anschutz values diverse experiences and perspectives and strives to fully include everyone who engages with the university. Inaccessible information technology (IT) negatively impacts people with a variety of disabilities, including mobility/orthopedic impairments, sensory impairments, specific learning disabilities, attention deficits, autism spectrum disorders, speech impairments, health impairments, and psychiatric conditions.

    The university's commitment to equal access to IT has been more formally stated through the publication of an IT Digital Accessibility Policy. The policy looks to the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.1 developed by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) Level AA for guidance in meeting its IT accessibility commitments.

    In addition to the policy, the Office of Information Technology maintains an IT Accessibility Scorecard, which provides specific techniques and testing methods to assist the CU Denver and CU Anschutz campus community including web designers, developers, content creators, and purchasing agents, in meeting the policy guidelines when creating and procuring IT.

    • IT Accessibility Scorecard

    Report inaccessible technology


    If you experience a barrier that affects your ability to access the Office of Technology's websites, videos, digital content, or other information technology, please send a detailed message to help@ucdenver.edu.

    Need help?

    While the Office of Information Technology can help with accessible IT, there are other resources at the university to help with:

    * Requesting accommodations
    * Assistive technologies
    * Facilities & physical access
    * Building accessible websites
    * ADA Compliance

    Let Us Know

    See information on the OIT website that needs updating? Let us know!

    OIT Website Update Request

    Office of Information Technology

    CU Anschutz

    Education II North

    13120 East 19th Avenue

    5th Floor

    Aurora, CO 80045


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