Congratulations, you've made it through Learn Accessibility! At this point, you've learned a lot of best practices for accessibility and gone through multiple rounds of accessibility testing. You may have learned some new terminology or refreshed your memory in our glossary.
We hope you are confident applying these lessons to your websites and web applications.
Additional resources
To continue building your accessibility knowledge, we recommend the following resources:
- Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI)
- Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) from the W3C
- WCAG Quick Reference Guide
- Accessibility on MDN
- Deque University Digital Accessibility Courses & Accessibility Reference Library
- Global web accessibility laws
- A11y talks
- List of accessible patterns from Smashing Magazine
- How to fund accessibility work
- A11y automation tracker
- Google developer documentation style guide
More resources can be found throughout the modules, as related to each topic.
Community highlights
We conducted several interviews with accessibility practitioners in 2022. Read about their journey to accessibility and best practices:
- Melanie Sumner told us about her journey into engineering, accessible design, Ember.js, and the importance of funding these efforts.
- Olutimilehin Olushuyi told us about his transition from the law to web development, building accessible community, and creating accessible layouts.
- Albert Kim told us about mental health awareness, building for invisible disabilities, the COGA Accessibility Community Group, and more practical wisdom.
- Elisa Bandy told us about her work for Google's internal documentation, how to prioritize use cases, and building expertise.
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Special thanks
Thank you to Aaron Forinton for supporting the publication of several modules and assessments.