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Functional Accessibility Evaluator 1.1

On this website, you can use a form to evaluate the functional accessibility of a single web page. All you need to do is enter the website address in the form. A score is assigned to the website page and user-friendly explanations accompany the scores. You can also register for a free user account to gain access to additional features, such as evaluating multiple pages via web crawling, generating a Sitewide Report that identifies problem pages, and saving reports. The level of expertise to use the site is closer to a lay person than a web expert in that explanations appear in understandable language and words.

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

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It took me several years of struggling with the heavy door to my building, sometimes having to wait until a person stronger came along, to realize that the door was an accessibility problem, not only for me, but for others as well. And I did not notice, until one of my students pointed it out, that the lack of signs that could be read from a distance at my university forced people with mobility impairments to expend a lot of energy unnecessarily, searching for rooms and offices. Although I have encountered this difficulty myself on days when walking was exhausting to me, I interpreted it, automatically, as a problem arising from my illness (as I did with the door), rather than as a problem arising from the built environment having been created for too narrow a range of people and situations.

Susan Wendell, author of
The Rejected Body: Feminist Philosophical Reflections on Disability