Accessibility Evaluation Exercises
Explore hands-on “Accessibility Evaluation” exercises to sharpen your skills and level up your craft. Want more? Browse all search results

Exercise
WCAG principles

Exercise
Alt text

Exercise
Able Figma plugin

Exercise
Use short line lengths

Exercise
WAVE web accessibility evaluation tool

Exercise
Google Lighthouse

Exercise
Avoid stark contrast

Exercise
WCAG color contrast for text

Exercise
axe DevTools Chrome extension

Exercise
Contrast Checker Chrome extensions

Exercise
Put the "Curb-Cut Effect" in practice
Exercise
Adapt products to people using assistive technologies
Exercise
Web Content Accessibility Guidelines

Exercise
Use the null attribute for decorative images

Exercise
Photosensitive Epilepsy Analysis Tool

Exercise
The Harding Test

Exercise
Diabetic retinopathy
Exercise
What is a disability?
Exercise
Level AA of WCAG

Exercise
Color contrast recommendations for icons

Exercise
Color contrast recommendations for input borders

Exercise
Edge cases
Exercise
Level A of WCAG

Exercise
What is accessibility?

Exercise
Skip color contrast rules for disabled elements
Exercise
Level AAA of WCAG

Exercise
Don't forget color contrast for selection

Exercise
Accessibility
Exercise
Use parallax cautiously

Exercise
Avoid autoplay

Exercise
Be mindful of logo text

Exercise
Avoid flashing elements
Exercise
Situational disabilities

Exercise
Color blindness

Exercise
Paragraph spacing

Exercise
Disability etiquette

Exercise
Don't leave table headers empty

Exercise
Make your links recognizable

Exercise
Loss of visual acuity

Exercise
Use descriptive link labels

Exercise
Don't rely on color alone

Exercise
Split accessibility issues from usability issues in reporting

Exercise
Importance of WCAG standards

Exercise
Recruiting users with accessibility needs

Exercise
Peripheral vision

Exercise
Turn off autoplay by default

Exercise
Use accessible media controls
Exercise
Ensure that controls have focus states

Exercise
Be upfront about accessibility research
Exercise