
The Business
Problem
The University
of Maine is the
state’s
Landgrant and
Seagrant
university. It
is the flagship
institution of
the seven-campus
University of
Maine system.
The
University of
Maine is the
principal
research and
graduate
institution of
the State of
Maine. It offers
a comprehensive
program of
undergraduate
and graduate
study. The
University is
one of seven
institutions in
the University
of Maine system;
each institution
complements and
collaborates
with the others
in the System to
fulfill the
needs of public
higher education
in the State of
Maine. The
University of
Maine has
statewide
responsibility
for those
educational,
research, and
public service
programs
associated with
its designation
as Maine's
land-grant
university and
sea-grant
college.
The University
System requires
that each campus
develop and
implement an
accessible web
policy. The
University of
Maine responded
by setting a
deadline of
April 2005 for
all sites to be
accessible,
based on Section
508 guidelines.
Details of the
University’s
policy and
accessibility
help site can be
viewed at
www.umaine.edu/insider/accessibility
The
University of
Maine Web
Advisory Group
(WAG) sponsors
the Universal
Design for the
Web
Subcommittee.
The University’s
webmaster and
chair of the
WAG, Howard
Mosher, is a
member of the
Subcommittee.
The Subcommittee
is chaired by
Alan Parks,
Coordinator of
dissemination
and technology
at the
University’s
Center for
Community
Inclusion and
Disability
Studies.
Subcommittee
members are
representative
of diverse units
of the
University, such
as the
Cooperative
Extension
Service,
Library, Student
Services, Office
of Equal
Opportunity,
etc. The
Subcommittee’s
charge is to
develop and
implement the
University’s web
accessibility
policy and to
provide training
and support to
the University
community.
The
University of
Maine has been
undertaking a
systems change
effort to
implement a
fully accessible
web policy.
University
websites, like
the University
administrative
structure, are
highly
decentralized.
While there is
an Information
Technology
office that
supports the
networks, and a
web manager who
oversees access
to the primary
University web
servers and
manages the
top-level pages,
every department
is capable of
setting up web
servers and
developing its
own web
presence.
The
University
sought a global
software
solution to help
implement
accessibility in
hundreds of
websites,
managed by
hundreds of
staff and
faculty. They
selected
HiSoftware
Solutions based
on their cost
and
effectiveness.
The Solution
The University
of Maine
purchased a
campus wide site
license for
AccVerify DS2
2005 and
AccRepair DS2
2005 from
HiSoftware along
with AccMonitor
Compliance
Server 2005.
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.
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 the
leading
accessibility
testing tools on
the market,
before choosing
HiSoftware’s
solutions.
AccVerify and
AccRepair will
provide Web
managers with
consistent
accessibility
review and
analysis, as
well as a
standard format
for feedback on
their Web sites.
It will be used
not only as a
tool to educate
Web managers in
the creation of
accessible
sites, but also
as a quality
assurance
mechanism for
the maintenance
of accessible
Web site
content.
AccMonitor
provides an easy
to rollout tool
that can perform
a variety of
quality checks.
"Because
HiSoftware’s
software
solutions have
worked so well
for us, we
recommended
HiSoftware to
the State of
Maine’s Web
Accessibility
Committee," said
Alan Parks,
Coordinator of
Dissemination
and Technology
at the
University’ of
Maine Center for
Community
Inclusion and
Disability
Studies. "As a
result, the
State has
purchased a
similar package
from
HiSoftware."
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