This accessibility statement applies to the University of York Wiki Service ( https://wiki.york.ac.uk ) , run by the University of York. The Wiki Service is a collaborative knowledge base tool, used by University staff to store, share and organise institutional information.
The software underpinning the Wiki Service is Confluence , supplied by Atlassian. Ensuring accessibility of the platform is a key focus of the provider, according to their accessibility statement. A detailed assessment of Confluence’ accessibility features can be found in the Voluntary Product Accessibility Template.
We want as many people as possible to be able to use this application. For example, that means you should be able to:
- Use your browser settings to change colours, contrast levels and fonts
- Zoom in up to 200% without the text spilling off the screen
- Listen to most of the website using a screen reader - for best performance we recommend using NVDA with Firefox on Windows, VoiceOver with Safari on OSX
AbilityNet has advice on making your device easier to use if you have a disability.
How accessible this website is
We know that some parts of this website are not fully accessible:
- Navigating some pages may not be possible by using the keyboard alone
- Many images and icons may not have alternative text/captions
- Some of the navigation elements, notably the navigation menu on and the search box on the top of the page are not recognised by a screen reader before clicking on them
- Some dynamic changes to content are not announced to screen readers
- Some text formatting and UI icons fail to meet the required contrast ratio standards
- Attached PDF documents aren’t fully compatible with screen reader software
- The application itself has no built in accessibility settings
Parts of this website that are not fully accessible
The following pages do not support one or more of the WCAG success criteria
- Create from...
- All updates
- Blog
- Blog Post
- Create a Page
- Editor -main content
- Editor-Add a date
- Editor-Add a macro
- Editor-Add a restriction
- Editor-Invite people
- Forgot password
- Health Monitor
- Login
- Page Selected
- Pages list
- Popular
- Project Wide
- Recently visited
- Recently worked on
- Reset-password
- Saved for later
- Search Results
- Space selected
- Spaces list
- Confluence - Edit attachment properties
- Confluence - Attach Files
- Confluence exported word.
- Confluence - Export dropdown
- Confluence - Confluence Upgrade Matrix.
Technical information about this website’s accessibility
The University of York is committed to making its website accessible, in accordance with the Public Sector Bodies (Websites and Mobile Applications) (No. 2) Accessibility Regulations 2018.
Compliance Status
This website is partially compliant with the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines version 2.1 AA standard, due to the non-compliances and exemptions listed below.
Non-accessible content
The following items do not comply with the WCAG 2.1 AA success criteria:
- Some Informative/active images are missing alternative text
- 1.1.1 Non-text Content (Level A)
- Lists are not marked according to html standards. Visual lists are not programmatically marked on some pages. Some Visual heading texts are not marked as a heading.
- 1.3.1 Info and Relationships (Level A)
- Screen readers can read parent page content outside the modal using arrow keys
- 1.3.2 Meaningful Sequence (Level A)
- Colour is used to convey information that is not conveyed in any other way in the search results page and date picker page.
- 1.4.1 Use of Color (Level A)
- Few Link texts and regular texts lacks 4.5 to 1 contrast ratio with their background colours
- 1.4.3 Contrast (Minimum) (Level AA)
- Text content is lost at 200% zoom in some pages
- 1.4.4 Resize text (Level AA)
- Some elements are not accessible by keyboard alone. Some elements use device-dependent event handlers and are therefore not accessible by keyboard alone
- 2.1.1 Keyboard (Level A)
- "No replacement" warning is not announced to screen readers users in the Editor -main content page. User is not Informed of Copied to clipboard info in the Editor-Invite people & Health Monitor pages
- 2.2.1 Timing Adjustable (Level A)
- The skip link does not become visible when it receives focus in all pages.
- 2.4.1 Bypass Blocks (Level A)
- The Focus order is not logical in some pages. Opened calendar widget is not the next thing in the sequential navigation order after the control that triggered the modal in the Search Results page.
- 2.4.3 Focus Order (Level A)
- The purpose of some links are not clear within its context in the Editor-Add a restriction and Spaces list pages.
- 2.4.4 Link Purpose (In Context) (Level A)
- The focus indicator (e.g. border or dotted underline / background etc.) is not clearly visible as one tabs through the page
- 2.4.7 Focus Visible (Level AA)
- The primary language of the page is not defined in over 19 pages
- 3.1.1 Language of Page (Level A)
- When the element gains keyboard focus, there is an unannounced change to the page in the Date picker screen.
- 3.2.1 On Focus (Level A)
- No visual label is present and the purpose of these fields is not clear without a visual label in over 10 pages
- 3.3.2 Labels or Instructions (Level A)
- Some elements are missing either closing tag or opening tag
- 4.1.1 Parsing (Level A)
- Some dynamic changes to content or elements are not announced. Some Buttons are missing accessible names. Some elements appears and functions like a button but are not marked up as such
- 4.1.2 Name, Role, Value (Level A)
Content that’s not within the scope of the accessibility regulations
The Wiki contains many attached PDF documents that are not fully accessible, and they may for example not be easily accessible using a screen reader. The accessibility regulations do not require us to fix PDFs or other documents published before 23 September 2018 if they’re not essential to providing our services.
Alternative formats
University of York staff and students can use Sensus Access or Blackboard Ally to convert PDFs and other files into an ebook, text file, audio or braille.
Reporting accessibility problems
If you find any problems not listed on this page, or think we’re not meeting accessibility requirements, you can report an accessibility issue.
If you are not happy with our response
The Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) is responsible for enforcing the Public Sector Bodies (Websites and Mobile Applications) (No. 2) Accessibility Regulations 2018 (the ‘accessibility regulations’). If you’re not happy with how we respond to your complaint, contact the Equality Advisory and Support Service (EASS).
Preparation of this accessibility statement
This statement was prepared on 28 January 2021. We used a combination of methods to check the site:
- Accessibility Evaluation Tool - we used WAVE to scan a number of sample pages. The software then evaluated the webpage and highlighted accessibility issues
- Manual Testing - we used an accessibility checklist to manually check a representative sample of pages from across our website, this included:
- Testing with a screen reader. As recommended by our supplier of Confluence we used NVDA to navigate the website
- Manually testing site navigation by only using the keyboard
- Testing with high contrast mode enabled. To test this we used a Windows 10 operating system with ‘black high contrast’ mode enabled, using a Google Chrome browser with the High contrast extension enabled