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Re: WordPress Accessibility

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From: Chanel Carlascio
Date: Jun 9, 2019 5:53PM


Yes, thank you for making that clear Amanda. I didn't mean to imply that
all that would be needed would be the themes and/or the plug-in. It might
help resolve some aspects of what is going on, but certainly not all of it.
I have used accessible themes/plug-ins in the past, and while they help -
they still required a lot of work to meet the standards.


On June 9, 2019 at 3:36:06 PM, Amanda J. Rush ( <EMAIL REMOVED> )
wrote:

Themes can address some of this to a certain extent, but accessibility
ready themes from the WordPress repo are still dependent on content
being entered accessibly for the most part. There's no way to slap a
theme and plugins together as part of a WordPress installation and get
accessible sites without the authors creating accessible content. The
devs on the non-WordPress sites could grab the content via the rest API
and then mark it up on the non-WordPress sites, but they'll probably
need at least some custom endpoints to make that work if they're dealing
with any custom post types along with the standard posts. Otherwise,
it's all down to the authors and then the WordPress site being
accessible itself.


Amanda



On 6/9/2019 5:36 PM, Chanel Carlascio wrote:
> I am not sure if this will help you, but I did find a number of Wordpress
> plugins that claim to address accessibility:
>
> https://wordpress.org/plugins/search/accessibility/
>
> And a number of themes that claim to be accessible:
> https://wordpress.org/themes/tags/accessibility-ready/
>
> I'd love to hear if any of these are a good work around for you.
>
>
>
> On June 9, 2019 at 1:45:11 PM, JP Jamous ( <EMAIL REMOVED> ) wrote:
>
> Hi folks,
>
>
>
> I have a unique situation. There is a WordPress blog running on ServerX. I
> have a client who wants to have access to that blog and show it on his web
> site. His web site uses ServerY.
>
>
>
> While ServerY does not run WordPress at all, developers decided to use a
> PHP
> function that would retrieve the page from the WordPress database. They
> will
> then show it on a particular page on ServerY, because it would be all of
> the
> HTML/text of that blog.
>
>
>
> 1. Users on ServerX can create their own blogs and they drag and drop
> all type of content. WCAG is not included at all. For example all of the
> headings could be H1s.
> 2. Whenever they create that blog, the blog is pages are saved to the
> WordPress database.
> 3. The first attempt for my client's developers is to grab the blog
> content and show it on my client's web site, which runs Apache only.
> 4. The next phase will be to allow visitors on my client's site to
> respond to blog comments from that web site.
>
>
>
> While I am not concerned about the server-side stuff, I have not been able
> to find a way to apply accessibility to this project. It seems to me that
> the content authors that will be creating the blog in the first place,
must
> use proper heading levels and all that good stuff. There isn't anything
> programmatic that my client's developers can do to ensure that imported
> content conforms to WCAG 2.0 Level AA guidelines.
>
>
>
> Has anyone worked on something like that in the past? Are there any PHP or
> add-ins that can be used to automate the process to achieve a better A11Y
> access? I know quite well that not all WCAG guidelines can be automated.
> Many require manual testing. Yet, if we can automate, whichever guidelines
> we can, that will definitely help the page.
>
>
>
> Any feedback or articles are greatly appreciated.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> --------------------
>
> JP Jamous
>
> Senior Digital Accessibility Engineer
>
> <mailto: <EMAIL REMOVED> > E-Mail Me | <http://linkedin.com/in/JPJamous>; Join
> My LinkedIn Network
>
> --------------------
>
>
>
>
>
> > > > > > > >