Open Book Accessibility for Librarians
Librarian Responsibilities
Accessibility applies to various aspects of libraries and there are several points in the process of providing content to users where accessibility issues might arise, including:
- static digital content files
- proprietary platforms
- websites
- catalogues
- end user devices
- reader apps
- print resources
Only some of this is within the control of librarians, and where any of these are true then librarians need to think about accessibility:
Am
- the
responsiblecontent has been created or produced by them - they have made decisions on which content supplier to use
- it is possible for them to easily provide an alternative format
Librarians are expected to:
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Make resources produced by the library accessible
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Evidence the accessibility of supplier content
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Choose publishers, vendors and suppliers whose products meet accessibility standards
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Provide alternative formats or support when a resource isn’t accessible
Make resources produced by the library content?accessible
Librarians produce various resources themselves, in various formats, where basic accessibility tasks within that format type must be completed. There may be automated checkers within the authoring tool that you can rely on.
- Word documents
- PDFs
- Maps
- Audio visual content
- Course content and training materials
There are also other formats, while authored by librarians, where the accessibility is generally handled elsewhere.
- Websites, although these are part of wider organisational websites and will have centralised support
- LibGuides, which will likely be on supplier platforms or an organisational website
- Repository content, which will likely have an accessible version elsewhere
Evidence the accessibility of supplier content
Providing information about the accessibility of content to end users is a key service librarians can provide. There are various mechanisms available with which to do this, that are detailed below.
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Publisher declaration
Responding(VPATs, tostatements)
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Metadata
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Certification
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External auditing LAA
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Self auditing
Organisations that check accessibility requestsfor you
Choose publishers, vendors and suppliers whose products meet accessibility standards
Platform accessibility, and how this isn't relevant for OA content
Book file accessibility
Variable accessibility - whole publisher or individual book level
Evidencing accessibility - methods, what to look for
Publisher declaration (VPATs, statements)MetadataCertificationExternal auditing LAASelf auditing
Organisations that check accessibility for you
Talking to small OA publishers about accessibility vs talking to the big 5
Investing in rather than buying/licensing content, what can they expect from that relationship
Provide alternative formats or support when a resource isn’t accessible
Responding to library user accessibility requests