posted on 2006-05-23, 16:52authored byLawrie Phipps, Dave McCarthy
During the preparation of this paper the authors received the comment “It’s very
interesting but what’s Computer Based Assessment got to do with disabilities?” In
short, the answer is that in the development of any learning and teaching material,
accessibility is important for several reasons, not least of which is the legislative and
quality standards that are now imposed on academic and academic support staff
across the UK. Guidelines to promote accessibility to online learning have been
produced by several projects including the Web Accessibility Initiative
(http://www.w3c.org/WAI/). This article will discuss the provision of Computer
Assisted Assessment (CAA) in relation to disabilities in higher education. Rather
than provide a series of ‘do’ and ‘do not’ statements, the importance of usability,
good design and use of existing resources has been stressed, indeed it should be
part of good practice for all students not just those with disabilities.
History
School
University Academic and Administrative Support
Department
Professional Development
Research Unit
CAA Conference
Pages
28837 bytes
Citation
PHIPPS and MCCARTHY, 2001. Computer Assisted Assessment and Disabilities. IN: Proceedings of the 5th CAA Conference, Loughborough: Loughborough University