Auditing Design Systems for Accessibility
1h 31mBeginner2023-08-03
Authors

Anna Cook
Course details
If a great design isn’t open and usable for everyone, how great is it? Designing accessibility into products is crucial to ensuring that you’re creating experiences that include people with disabilities. In this course, Anna E. Cook shows you how to conduct an accessibility audit on your design systems to ensure accessible experiences, helping you meet your users’ needs—while also gaining competitive advantages by building truly innovative and amazing products.
Join Anna as she covers what you need to know about an accessibility audit, and how to audit designs, client-side code, and documentation. She shows you how to document your a11y audit and make it actionable, explains key considerations for prioritizing your a11y audit and the issues it discovers, and how to share results with the consumers of your design system.
Join Anna as she covers what you need to know about an accessibility audit, and how to audit designs, client-side code, and documentation. She shows you how to document your a11y audit and make it actionable, explains key considerations for prioritizing your a11y audit and the issues it discovers, and how to share results with the consumers of your design system.
Skills covered
AccessibilityDesign ThinkingDiversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI)User ExperienceProjectGraphic Design
Concepts
0. Introduction
- 01 - Auditing design systems for accessibility
- 02 - What you should know
1. Accessibility, Design, and Development
- 03 - Why accessibility matters
- 04 - Why accessibility matters in product design and development
- 05 - Who to consider in accessible design and development
- 06 - Digital accessibility standards
2. Design Systems and Accessibility
- 07 - Atomic design principles
- 08 - Checking an example system and design for accessibility
- 09 - Addressing issues at a system level
- 10 - Why design systems must consider accessibility
3. Setting Up a Design System Audit
- 11 - What is an accessibility audit
- 12 - Considerations for an accessibility audit
- 13 - What do you review in a design system accessibility audit
- 14 - Setting up an accessibility audit
- 15 - Creating an accessibility audit document
4. Auditing a Design System for Accessibility
- 16 - Reviewing designs for accessibility
- 17 - Automated testing for front-end code
- 18 - Manual testing for front-end code
- 19 - Reviewing documentation for accessibility
5. Documenting a Design System Accessibility Audit
- 20 - Adding issues to your original document
- 21 - Mapping issues to WCAG criterion
- 22 - Prioritizing issues by impact
- 23 - Grouping issues into themes
6. Acting on a Design System Accessibility Audit
- 24 - Sharing results with your team
- 25 - Sharing results with organizational leaders
- 26 - Prioritizing and acting on issues with your team
- 27 - Sharing results with design system users
- 28 - Using results to further motivate better research and advocacy with people who have disabilities
Conclusion
- 29 - There's no such thing as perfect accessibility
Related courses
- Increase Accessibility in Digital Marketing with GenAI
- Using AI for Accessible Design Workflows
- Inclusive Typography
- Canva: Designing Engaging, Accessible Presentations
- Using Stark for Accessible Design Projects
- Web Accessibility for Developers
- Accessibility and AI: Bridging the Disability Divide
- Build an Image Captioning Tool for Visually Impaired Users with Gemini