By Donato Matturro on Thursday, 20 August 2020
Category: August

Accessible Resources for Joomla 3.x

«Kindness is the language which the deaf can hear and the blind can see» (M.Twain):  with an accessible template we can really do it!

Hello Joomlers and happy August! Today we have some good news for you from the Joomla Accessibility Team: meanwhile we work on the new, accessible, Joomla 4, we decided to select some accessible resources for you, immediately operational with Joomla 3.

‘Kindness is the language which the deaf can hear and the blind can see’. With this famous sentence by Mark Twain, we kick off a series of articles produced by the Joomla Accessibility Team, to highlight the resources immediately available to develop an accessible site in Joomla! 3.

We started reviewing templates, extensions and online resources.  We will share with you the links to access any technical documentation available. We will analyze which are the systems to check the sites and obtain useful information about the digital accessibility of our platforms and valuable information on how to improve them. 

The recent regulations, for example the Accessibility Act of the European Parliament, require us to consider accessibility as a rule. It’s a pity that there is a need for a mandatory requirement, to oblige developers to think about accessibility, but this will finally allow more users to access websites and services.

Prior to presenting the resource of this month, let’s remember the meaning of Accessibility.

What does accessibility mean?

Accessibility is the characteristic of a device, a service, a resource or an environment that can be easily used by any type of user (source Wikipedia). We have chosen to utilize this generic definition of the most widespread encyclopedia on the web to underline how this concept must be shared starting from its most common meaning. 

In order to be applied effectively by all the actors:

Here we talk about users' rights to access: 

Accessibility starts from conscious planning, whether it is a website, a device or a service, a resource or an area: that is to say that accessible is not born but it becomes.

How do you become accessible?

Dealing with the sensory and motor differences of people, studying the limits of ergonomics of the able-bodied, knowing how to interface with auxiliary devices that reduce (but do not cancel) the sensory or motor deficit, following national and international directives.

Web accessibility

In particular, the needs that Web accessibility aims to address include:

An accessible website should be:

Perceivable

Operable

Understandable

Robust

Digital accessibility starts with a template

Even if the purpose of the next Joomla 4 will be to have a completely accessible system, both in the front end and in the back end, we can currently manage things using resources that allow us to obtain platforms that are accessible to all. To do this, it is better to carefully manage the choice of the template that could allow us to obtain a good result and also greater flexibility of use.

The creation of an accessible website starts from the choice of the template.

Our friends at the Istituto dei Ciechi di Milano Foundation,  with whom we collaborate, confirm it: they have a site in Joomla and promote courses on the use of Joomla for blind people. Their experience and our knowledge of the CMS have allowed us to travel the roads of accessibility also from the point of view of the development of a site.

Today we present an accessible template for Joomla! 3 available free of charge for non-commercial use.

Etico: An accessible template compatible with the Wcag 2.1 guidelines

The ‘Etico’ accessible template was created by Joomlers Donato Matturro and Vito Disimino, members of the JAT (Joomla! Accessibility Team), as part of an accessibility project, conducted with the Joomla Lombardia Association, a former member of the AgID coalition and created following the guidelines proposed by the Italian Government's Agency for Digital Italy.

The Template has already been installed on some platforms of organizations and associations and also on commercial platforms that have decided to make their communication more ethical. To see it in action you can visit the official online version at this link.

Here are some of the features offered by the template:

How to get an evaluation copy of the new accessible template

The use of this template is granted for free for educational and/or non-commercial purposes only.

Keep accessibility in mind!

Thank you for following us so far and, above all, thank you for taking digital accessibility into consideration: an ethical, conscious and responsible gesture! 

In the next chapter, we will talk more about accessible Joomla 3.0 Templates and we will see what other resources are available online.

Donato Matturro e Vito Disimino

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