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Re: ADA-compliance for abstract reasoning testing

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From: Danielle Chouhan
Date: Apr 9, 2020 1:31PM


Hey Ashwin,
Thank you for reaching out to me! Lumina (my company) has a large freelancer database in which you can create a profile and describe your skills and experience. It would allow teams at Lumina to reach out to you for projects, as well as other clients who have access to our database. You can sign up here to create a profile: www.expertsourcepro.com

Best regards,
Danielle


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Danielle Chouhan
Associate Director of Development and Accessibility
Lumina Datamatics, Inc.

UPCOMING ABSENCES:



Phone: 617-818-7123
Located at: 600 Cordwainer Drive, Unit 103, Norwell, MA 02061 <webextlink://600%20Cordwainer%20Drive,%20Unit%20103,%20Norwell,%20MA%2002061>
http://www.luminadatamatics.com <http://www.luminadatamatics.com/>;

On 4/9/20, 6:06 AM, "Ashwin Kumar V" < <EMAIL REMOVED> > wrote:

Hi Danielle,
Kindly excuse since my question is off topic. Well, I train people with
disabilities in Accessibility Testing where most of them prefer to work
from home as freelancers. Is there a way they can join your company's
freelancer network and get some projects for their livelihood? Thx!

On Wed, Apr 8, 2020 at 11:43 PM Danielle Chouhan <
<EMAIL REMOVED> > wrote:

> Hello, I work for a company that offers various types of content
> development work and manage a large freelancer database. As part of that
> database, we ask -- but do not require -- freelancers to take several
> different types of abstract reasoning tests so that we can help to better
> match up freelancers to projects. We are trying to come up with a way to
> make these types of tests accessible and ADA-compliant. It is NOT mandatory
> for freelancers to take these tests to be a part of the database, but those
> who have results in our database would benefit more than those freelancers
> who do not. These tests are often heavily visual and I assume that just
> offering alt-text will not truly suffice as I imagine there are better ways
> to approach abstract reasoning testing for visually impaired users. Does
> anyone have any recommendations for the best way to approach
> accessibility/ADA-compliance with abstract reasoning tests?
>
> Thank you for any guidance or direction anyone can offer!
> best,
> Danielle
>
>
> > > > >


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Best regards,
Ashwin Kumar V.
Certified Web Accessibility Specialist
Mob: 9008980065
Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ashwinkumar1/