Accessibility Symposium 2019
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The Ontario Council of University Libraries Accessibility Symposium was held at York University on January 29, 2019. The symposium provided an opportunity for members of the Accessibility Community who provide accessible content to get together and discuss best practices pertaining to the provisioning of alternate formats. This event encouraged an open discussion of changes/developments that impact us all in our day to day service delivery of accessible content. This collection endeavours to make available presentation content shared at the Symposium.
EVENT TRANSCRIPT
The event transcript is available here: http://hdl.handle.net/10315/36110
PROGRAM CONTENT
Opening Remarks
Welcome address from Joy Kirchner, Dean of Libraries, York University
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View video: https://youtu.be/RYF1Q04rHkw
Keynote: Academic Ableism and Open Access(ibility)
In this presentation, we will address the ableist attitudes, policies, and practices that are built into higher education. We will also interrogate the minimal and temporary means we have been given to address inequities and provide accessibility, and the cost such an approach has for disabled students and faculty. Finally, we will explore our own ableist biases, apologies and defenses in an effort to build tools for anti-ableist education.
Jay Dolmage Ph.D, Editor, Canadian Journal of Disability Studies Associate Professor of English, University of Waterloo
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Presentation website: https://accessibilitysymposium.wordpress.com/
View video: https://youtu.be/k4AbsVHRWwE
Canadian perspectives on the Marrakesh Treaty: From inception to implementation
This panel will share the story of how the Marrakesh treaty made its way to take its place amongst the WIPO body of copyright treaties, and the affordances it offers for access to published works for the blind, visually impaired and print-disabled community. In addition, panelists from Manitoba and Ontario will share regional Canadian successes, challenges, and opportunities with respect to implementing the Treaty in the context of the Accessibility for Manitobans Act (AMA) and the Accessibility for Ontarians with Disabilities Act (AODA).
Victoria Owen, Information Policy Scholar-Practitioner, University of Toronto
View video: https://youtu.be/D9zQ2gQggF0
Katya Pereyaslavska, Scholars Portal, Ontario Council of University Libraries
View video: https://youtu.be/vYiGT1WXoxk
Accessible Copying and Copyright: Section 32 and the Copyright Act Review
Copyright concerns often present an obstacle when providing content in accessible formats. Even with a specific Copyright Act exception intended to enable the provision of accessible material to those who need it, there are still restrictions on when, how, and what kinds of copies can be made. This presentation examines the finer points of Section 32 of the Copyright Act, and the ways in which it facilitates (or doesn’t!) accessible copying. It also looks at Canada’s recent Copyright Act review, which provided an opportunity to raise awareness of the problems that Section 32 presents, and to advocate for changes that would remove barriers for persons with disabilities as well as for those who provide accessible services.
Heather Martin, Copyright Officer, Manager, E-Learning and Reserve Services, University of Guelph Library
View video: https://youtu.be/3xd7siObJ9s
Library eResources Accessibility Project (LEAP)
In 2015, Ontario’s college libraries launched a project to identify a solution that meets and exceeds the AODA requirement for accessible multimedia resources by the January 2020 deadline. In this presentation you will learn about the Library eResources Accessibility Project (LEAP) and the tool that we’re building to support the collaborative assessment of library eresources.
Siobán Linnen, Virtual Reference and Accessibility, Ontario Colleges Library Service
Corinne Abba, AODA Coordinator - Diversity, Equity and Human Rights Services, George Brown College
View video: https://youtu.be/YIuBH3g2CxM
Assessing the Accessible Content Provider Landscape in North America
This presentation will share the results of a survey distributed across North America to the accessible content provider community in higher education. The intent of the study was to capture the current state of the accessible content provider landscape to glean best practices in the field as well as identify future areas of collaboration and research concentration. Questions posed to the community focused on sources of funding, policies, workflows, technological infrastructure, and publisher relations.
Andrea Kosavic, Associate Dean Digital Engagement and Strategy, York University Libraries
Meredith Hatton, Manager Access Services and Library Accessibility Services, York University Libraries
Dataset: https://doi.org/10315/35711
View video: https://youtu.be/YIuBH3g2CxM [starts at 19:40]
Student panel: Obtaining accessible content at post-secondary institutions
A panel of student representatives have been invited to speak to their lived experience with obtaining accessible content at post-secondary institutions in Ontario. They will speak to challenges and coping strategies, and will offer suggestions for improving user experience.
View video: https://youtu.be/KhBqThi9oqA
Feedback and closing remarks
View video: https://youtu.be/0R6IgxBuC6k