[accessibleimage] Jodi Award winners update
- From: Lisa Yayla <fnugg@xxxxxxxxx>
- To: accessibleimage@xxxxxxxxxxxxx, art_beyond_sight_learning_tools@xxxxxxxxxx, Art Beyond Sight Theory and Research <art_beyond_sight_theory_and_research@xxxxxxxxxx>, art_beyond_sight_learning_tools@xxxxxxxxxx, art_beyond_sight_advocacy@xxxxxxxxxx, Access to Art Museums <artbeyondsightmuseums@xxxxxxxxxx>, Art Beyond Sight Educators List <art_beyond_sight_educators@xxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Fri, 07 Apr 2006 04:24:21 +0200
Managing Information-UK
Thursday, April 06, 2006
Tate Modern And Wakefield Library Win Website Accessibility Awards
The winners of the 2006 Jodi Awards for excellence in museum, gallery, library,
archive and heritage website accessibility have been announced at a ceremony at
the British Museum.
The winners are:
Jodi Award for Excellence:
i-Map: The Everyday Transformed, Tate Modern.
www.tate.org.uk/imap/imap2
This site does what seems impossible to many people, by making modern art (and
its key concepts) accessible to blind and partially sighted people. It is one
of the few to describe collections for visually impaired people. The images are
highly contrasted and made visible to partially-sighted people. The judges were
unanimous in selecting the winning site, which they agreed had yet more
ground-breaking qualities and was destined to set the standard in global best
practice. The site is already the world leader in making online collections
accessible to blind and partially sighted people.
Jodi Award for Excellence with Low Budgets:
Speaking Volumes, Wakefield Library and Information Service.
www.speakingvolumesonline.org.uk
This website was designed to allow readers to write content. Blind and
partially sighted site users chat about books and audio book readers. The
judges said the site was enjoyable, stimulating and easy-to-use. A partnership
with public libraries throughout Yorkshire and Humberside, Speaking Volumes is
an exemplary regional resource for reader development.
The judges awarded a 'Commendation for Excellence in user involvement' to:
The History of Wolverhampton; Wolverhampton Arts and Museums Service.
www.wolverhamptonhistory.org.uk
This site is notable for its simplicity in design and use. It was fine-tuned using feedback received from disabled site users and is a good example of the benefits of user involvement in website development.
MLA Chairman, Mark Wood, who presented the awards, said: "This year, all nominations
met high technical web accessibility standards. It is a sign that museums, libraries and
archives are developing ambitious targets and playing an active part nationally in
meeting e-government targets for web accessibility. The winning sites involved users in
the web development process. They are wonderful examples of the unique ways in which
museums, libraries and archives can use the web to make collections accessible to
visually impaired people."
The 2006 Jodi Awards were presented at a ceremony held last night at the British Museum in London. Initiated in 2003, the awards this year extended to include entries from Wales, in partnership with CyMAL (Museums, Libraries and Archives Wales), for the first time.
Sponsorship for the Jodi Awards 2006 is provided by Simulacra, www.simulacra.com,
the new media consultancy offering award-winning web-based information management solutions.
The 2006 judging panel comprised: Marcus Weisen, MLA Health and Disability Adviser; Nina Baptise Yorkshire Museums, Libraries and Archives Council; Ross Parry, Department of Museums Studies, University of Leicester; and Jon Pratty, 24 Hour Museum.
The judges were supported by the results of automated and user testing commissioned from designedforall, www.designedforall.co.uk. The user panel included blind, partially sighted, dyslexic and deaf people.
Named in memory of Jodi Mattes (1973-2001), who worked as part of the British Museum's COMPASS team and later at the Royal National Institute for the Blind, the Jodi Awards honour Jodi's efforts to ensure the museum's COMPASS website was accessible as possible.
The awards are developed and sustained by the Museums, Libraries and Archives
Council (MLA), 24 Hour Museum and the British Museum. The MLA is the national
development agency working for, and on behalf of, museums, libraries and
archives, advising the government on policy and priorities for the sector. The
MLA's roles are to provide strategic leadership, to act as a powerful advocate,
to develop capacity and to promote innovation and change. Visit: www.mla.gov.uk
The 2005 MLA report "Accessibility of museum, library and archives websites: the MLA
audit" highlighted the need to keep improving web accessibility in the sector. The
report and further information on the annual Jodi Awards are available at:
www.mla.gov.uk/website/policy/Diversity/web_Accessibility
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