Web Accessibility of Palestinian Universities: Can We Access Higher
Education Information during COVID-19?
Iyad Abu Doush
1
, Mohammed A. Awadallah
2
and Mohammed Azmi Al-Betar
3,4
1
Computing Department, American University of Kuwait, Salmiya, Kuwait
2
Department of Computer Science, Al-Aqsa University, P.O. Box 4051, Gaza, Palestine
3
Department of Information Technology - MSAI, College of Engineering and Information Technology,
Ajman University, Ajman, U.A.E.
4
Department of Information Technology, Al-Huson University College,
Al-Balqa Applied University, Al-Huson, Irbid, Jordan
Keywords:
Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG), Universities Web Accessibility, Automatic Accessibility
Evaluation.
Abstract:
University web portals are considered one of the main access gateways for universities. Accessibility of
university online services is a major issue for undergraduate and graduate students with disabilities. Online
registration makes people with disabilities more independent to register courses, add, drop courses, or attend
courses independently. Yet, many people with disabilities in Palestine face major challenges when using uni-
versity websites. In order to understand the issues that face people with disabilities when they use websites
of Palestinian universities, this study evaluates the accessibility of the home pages of these universities during
COVID-19. In order to evaluate partially the accessibility of Palestinian universities during COVID-19, we ap-
ply automatic evaluation on all homepages of eighteen Palestinian universities. The most violated guideline is
empty link which is related to success criterion 2.4.4 Link Purpose. The second highest violated error is linked
image missing alternative text which is related to the success criterion 1.1.1 Non-text Content. The obtained
results show that all the universities websites are not conforming to Web Content Accessibility Guidelines
(WCAG) 2.0 level A.
1 INTRODUCTION
According to the world health organization (WHO),
15% of the world population lives with some form
of disability. People with disabilities attend univer-
sities to improve their skills and this can assist them
to enter the job market and be financially indepen-
dent (Fichten et al., 2003). One of the obstacles that
encounter students with disabilities is the inability to
access the web site of the university because it does
not conform to the accessibility standards (Ali et al.,
2019). The university student can use the university
website to apply for the university, read information,
access the registration, search the library, and access
the online learning system. Therefore, it is very cru-
cial for people with disabilities to access all the infor-
mation provided by the university website (Ali et al.,
2019).
Web accessibility means providing the content on
the web for all the people and that the content can be
accessed by automatic tools including assistive tech-
nologies used by people with disabilities (Abu-Doush
et al., 2013). The ultimate purpose is to have an in-
clusive web which can be accessed by all people along
with people with disabilities (Paris, 2006).
In 2008 the United Nations Convention on the
Rights of Disabled Persons established a law that en-
courages governments to guarantee the accessibility
of physical environment and technologies. This was
used by several countries to update their laws to have
a commitment to ensure the accessibility of technol-
ogy and the physical environment.
The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) is an in-
ternational organization that places specifications and
rules for the web. The Web Contents Accessibility
Guidelines (WCAG) (wca, ) are certain rules pro-
vided by W3C which can be used by web developers
to ensure the accessibility of websites by all people
including people with disabilities. These guidelines
provided by W3C are called.
196
Doush, I., Awadallah, M. and Al-Betar, M.
Web Accessibility of Palestinian Universities: Can We Access Higher Education Information during COVID-19?.
DOI: 10.5220/0010146601960201
In Proceedings of the 4th International Conference on Computer-Human Interaction Research and Applications (CHIRA 2020), pages 196-201
ISBN: 978-989-758-480-0
Copyright
c
2020 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
This paper evaluates partially the accessibility of
the homepage of eighteen Palestinian universities us-
ing two automatic tools. The evaluation results can
help in highlighting the commonly violated WCAG
2.0 in Palestinian universities. This can help in rais-
ing the awareness of implementing these guidelines
in Palestinian universities and in higher education in
general.
The rest of the paper is structured as follows: The
background is presented in Section 2. The methodol-
ogy is described in Section 3. Section 4 provide the
results and discussions. Finally, the conclusion and
some future directions are drawn in Section 5.
2 BACKGROUND
The web accessibility evaluation can be conducted
normally using experts’ reviews, automatic tools, and
user testing (Doush and AlMeraj, 2019).
Much research work has been conducted to eval-
uate the accessibility of web sites that provide differ-
ent services for users. In this section, we will present
some relevant research that investigated the web ac-
cessibility of universities websites.
Ismail and Kuppusamy (Ismail and Kuppusamy,
2018) conducted a study to evaluate the accessibil-
ity of Indian universities website homepages. Two
automatic tools (AChecker and WAVE) are used for
evaluating the homepages of 302 Indian universities.
The WCAG 2.0 guidelines are used. The study out-
come points out that 73% of homepages are either
medium or high accessibility. Another study by the
same authors (Ismail and Kuppusamy, 2019) evalu-
ate the web accessibility of college websites that are
affiliated with the University of Kashmir and Clus-
ter University Srinagar. The study used two auto-
matic evaluation tools web accessibility test (TAW)
and the accessibility engine powering browser exten-
sions (aXe). Both tools indicate many violations of
the success criteria of WCAG.
Some researchers provide recommendations to
enhance universities’ website accessibility. For ex-
ample, Hackett and Parmanto (Hackett and Parmanto,
2005) report that not providing alternative text for im-
ages and image map hotspots is the most violated
WCAG success criteria.
Some studies investigate the web accessibility sta-
tus in universities in some Middle Eastern countries.
A study investigated the web accessibility of uni-
versities in Saudia Arabia for the period 2009 and
2017 (Akram and Sulaiman, 2017). The study out-
come shows that none of the universities conform to
WCAG 2.0. In another Study, 15 web developers and
web researchers from 9 Saudi universities interviewed
to identify the challenges to conform to WCAG 2.0
(Alayed et al., 2016). The main challenges discov-
ered are not involving people with disabilities in web
development, unavailability of clear instructions for
university website accessibility, and insufficient web
accessibility training for developers.
Providing accessible physical environments and
technologies for people with disabilities is crucial in
higher education. Alsalem and Abu Doush (Alsalem
and Doush, 2018) investigated how accessible are the
physical environments and technologies in the univer-
sities and colleges in Jordan for students with disabili-
ties. Questionnaires are used to poll staff of computer
laboratories and libraries in addition to web develop-
ers and e-learning staff. The study results show the
lack of assistive technologies in computer labs and li-
braries. Also, two experts evaluated the universities
websites and found that there is no agreement with
WCAG 2.0.
A limited number of studies explore the acces-
sibility of other e-services provided by universities.
Emad et al. (Ali et al., 2019) evaluated the online
registration system in two of the largest universities
in Jordan. Visually impaired students performed dif-
ferent tasks to register the classes online. The results
of the study show that the visually impaired students
were not able to complete many of the tasks because
the online registration website does not conform with
WCAG 2.0. The first main barrier for most students
was that the screen reader reads only numbers in the
table boxes and other boxes on the web page with-
out mentioning what are these numbers represent (i.e.,
”Meaningful sequence”). This is because tables are
not presented in the correct sequence. The second
main barrier is the high number of needed tabs, more
than 20 tabs are needed by the users, and no ‘skip to
content’ link is provided.
Kurt (Kurt, 2017) performs a longitude study
to evaluate the improvement of web accessibility in
Turkish universities over the period 2010 to 2015.
The outcome of the study shows that in general, the
accessibility levels have decreased slightly. The most
violated criteria are missing text alternative for non-
text content.
Hammad et al. (Hammad et al., 2020) investigated
the usability and accessibility of eleven e-learning
portals from eleven countries using three automatic
tools. The used tools are EvalAccess for web acces-
sibility evaluation, Linkchecker to check the usabil-
ity of the website, and Pingdom to check the website
performance based on the load time and the page size.
The study outcome shows that all the tested e-learning
portals do not conform to the WCAG 2.0.
Web Accessibility of Palestinian Universities: Can We Access Higher Education Information during COVID-19?
197
Ismailova and Inal (Ismailova and Inal, 2018)
evaluated the web accessibility of the top universities
in Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan, and Turkey
using automated assessment tools. The majority of
the university websites in the study did not meet the
WCAG 2.0 accessibility criteria. Only two Kyrgyz
and two Kazakh university websites attained confor-
mance level A. The study outcome point out the im-
portance of improving the accessibility of these web-
sites.
Kamal et al. (Kamal et al., 2016) evaluate web
accessibility for 36 Jordanian universities and educa-
tional institutes using seven automatic tools. The re-
sults show a weakness in applying the WCAG on all
the tested websites.
Hassouna et al. (Hassouna et al., 2017) investi-
gated in 2017 the web accessibility problems on 15
Palestinian university websites using WCAG guide-
lines to design accessible web page prototype. The
opinion of 16 blind users’ is polled using an online
questionnaire to identify the features of the prototype.
The developed prototype is then validated by the blind
user’s. The evaluation shows that the developed pro-
totype is highly accessible (mean score 4.19).
3 METHODOLOGY
All the Palestinian universities listed in the ministry of
higher education website
1
are evaluated in this study
as shown in Table 1. The homepage of the website is
tested as it is the first door to enter all other pages and
services of the website.
Table 1: The abbreviations of the studied universities.
Abb. University Homepage
AAU Arab American University https://www.aaup.edu/
ANU An-Najah National University https://www.najah.edu/ar/
AQU Al-Aqsa University https://www.alaqsa.edu.ps/ar/home/
AZU Al-Azher University http://www.alazhar.edu.ps/
BU Bethlehem University https://www.bethlehem.edu/
BZU Birzeit University http://www.birzeit.edu/
GU Gaza University http://www.gu.edu.ps/
HU Hebron University https://www.hebron.edu/
IU Israa University https://ar.israa.edu.ps/
IUG The Islamic University of Gaza http://www.iugaza.edu.ps/
PPU Palestine Polytechnic University https://www.ppu.edu/p/ar
PTU Palestine Technical University https://ptuk.edu.ps/
QOU Al-Quds Open University https://www.qou.edu/
QU Al-Quds University https://www.alquds.edu/ar/
UP University of Palestine https://up.edu.ps/ar/
The web accessibility of these websites is evalu-
ated using two automatic tools. We use two evalua-
tion tools as different tools can capture different vi-
1
http://www.mohe.pna.ps/Higher-Education/
Institutions/Universities
olations. We selected the top two automatic evalu-
ation tools in terms of the correctly identified prob-
lems according to (Abduganiev, 2017) which are EIII
Checker
2
and WAVE
3
. Both tools check the website
conformance against WCAG 2.0 Level A success cri-
teria. The EIII Checker tool provides an accessibility
score of the evaluated website based on the number of
problems on the website.
WAVE evaluation tool returns the following sum-
mary about the tested web page Errors, contrast er-
rors, alerts, features, structural elements, and ARIA.
As we are interested in WCAG we present only these
errors.
Also, we tested the mobile-friendliness of univer-
sity Web sites using Google mobile-friendly test
4
.
Note that we use only automatic tools which is con-
sidered a partial check of web accessibility because of
the need of expert evaluation or user evaluation to ob-
tain all the accessibility issues that cannot be detected
by automatic tools (Doush and AlMeraj, 2019).
4 EXPERIMENTAL RESULTS
The results from the WAVE tool show that the uni-
versities with the largest number of errors are ANU
and AAU with 60 and 50 errors respectively. The uni-
versities with the smallest number of errors are AZU
and PTU with 11 errors for both of them. The most
violated guideline is empty link which happened 158
times. This violation is related to success criterion
2.4.4 Link Purpose. The second highest violated er-
ror is linked image missing alternative text with 101
times, which is the success criterion 1.1.1 Non-text
Content.
The results from EIII Checker show that the uni-
versities PTU and ANU have the largest number of er-
rors with 80 and 62 errors respectively. On the other
hand, the universities AZU and UP have the small-
est number of errors with 23 and 25 errors respec-
tively. The universities with the highest accessibility
score are QOU and AZU with the rank first and sec-
ond. This matches partially the result of the number
of errors as AZU had the smallest number of errors.
While UP had also the second smallest number of er-
rors with 25 errors, but QOU ranked second in acces-
sibility score with 33 errors.
The most violated guideline is use HTML form
controls and links with 163 errors. This is the success
criterion 4.1.2 Name, Role, Value. The next violated
2
http://checkers.eiii.eu/
3
https://wave.webaim.org/
4
https://search.google.com/test/mobile-friendly
CHIRA 2020 - 4th International Conference on Computer-Human Interaction Research and Applications
198
Table 2: Wave.
# Error AAU ANU AQU AZU BU BZU GU HU IU IUG PPU PTU QOU QU UP Total
1 Missing alternative text 10 9 1 5 2 14 6 10 57
2 Missing form label 1 4 1 1 14 2 2 1 2 2 1 31
3 Multiple form labels 14 14
4 Empty button 4 6 1 4 1 1 1 18
5 Empty link 13 16 18 4 2 7 20 3 9 11 12 11 14 10 8 158
6 Empty heading 4 2 10 1 4 21
7 Broken skip link 1 1
8 Broken ARIA reference 14 26 40
9 Broken ARIA menu 7 7
10 Linked image missing alternative text 18 20 9 4 3 8 10 14 13 2 101
11 Document language missing 1 1
Total 50 60 36 11 39 41 41 14 10 24 27 11 32 31 22
Table 3: EIII Checker.
# Error AAU ANU AQU AZU BU BZU GU HU IU IUG PPU PTU QOU QU UP Total
1 Accessible name for image links 18 6 9 4 4 2 2 23 9 13 8 2 100
2 Use alt on img elements 1 16 4 9 1 8 8 11 8 14 4 12 96
3 Language of Parts 4 8 2 14
4 Provide descriptive labels 1 4 1 1 14 1 2 2 3 1 2 32
5 Provide descriptive headings 4 2 12 1 4 23
6 Define ids for elements 3 3 3 6 15 8 1 68 1 108
7 Use HTML form controls and links 17 21 19 4 2 11 18 6 10 9 5 11 14 8 8 163
8 Title attribute to identify controls 1 4 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 16
9 Use a button to identify the purpose of a form control 1 4 1 1 1 1 1 1 11
10 Submit forms without submit buttons 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 10
11 Use the title for frame and iframe elements 4 1 1 1 1 3 2 1 14
12 Use of pointing-device-specific only event handlers 1 7 2 10
13 Primary language of page 1 1
14 Label groups of form elements 1 1
Total 46 62 40 23 47 30 47 31 35 42 30 80 33 28 25
Score (100) 86.66 90.53 87.75 92.57 75.96 88.05 80.51 76.95 93.72 78.39 83.48 92.03 95.47 87.69 76.68
Web Accessibility of Palestinian Universities: Can We Access Higher Education Information during COVID-19?
199
Table 4: Results of the Google mobile-friendly test.
University Mobile friendly
AAU P
ANU P
AQU F
AZU F
BU F
BZU P
GU P
HU F
IU P
IUG P
PPU P
PTU P
QOU P
QU P
UP P
guideline is define ids for elements with 108 errors
which is the success criterion 4.1.1 Parsing. The third
most violated guideline is accessible name for image
links with 100 errors which is the success criterion
4.1.2 Name, Role, Value. The provided explanation
is based on the EIII Checker tool test demonstration
5
.
The findings suggest an urgent need to improve
the accessibility of the Palestinian universities web-
sites. They reveal that a large number of homepages
are inaccessible. Violations of the WCAG 2.0 suc-
cess criteria include non-text content, link purpose (in
context), and name, role, value.
Table 4 presents the evaluation results of Google
mobile-friendly test. Four out of fifteen university
sites homepages pass the test. This shows that 27%
of the universities home pages have some accessibil-
ity problems for mobile device users.
5 CONCLUSION
In this study, we evaluate the accessibility of eigh-
teen Palestinian universities against WCAG 2.0 level
A during COVID-19. The study uses two of the top-
recommended automatic tools by the state-of-the-art
to evaluate the web accessibility of home pages of
these universities.
The overall results show that most of the eval-
uated Palestinian universities websites lack accessi-
bility. Unfortunately, none of the universities home-
pages were conformance to the WCAG 2.0 level A.
The commonly failed accessibility success criteria are
”1.1.1 non-text content”, ”2.4.4 link purpose” and
”4.1.2 name, role, value”.
5
http://checkers.eiii.eu/en/tests/
There is a need to further develop appropriate
policies and laws and set a national-level plan to en-
force the adoption of the national accessibility guide-
lines and WCAG standards for better inclusion of all
citizens when they use higher education.
In the future, we can involve users with disabilities
in the testing and we can use task-based evaluation
by asking users to do common tasks that is done by
students in higher education.
REFERENCES
Web content accessibility guidelines (wcag) overview.
https://www.w3.org/WAI/standards-guidelines/
wcag/. Accessed: 2020-08-1.
Abduganiev, S. G. (2017). Towards automated web acces-
sibility evaluation: a comparative study. Int. J. Inf.
Technol. Comput. Sci.(IJITCS), 9(9):18–44.
Abu-Doush, I., Bany-Mohammed, A., Ali, E., and Al-
Betar, M. A. (2013). Towards a more accessible e-
government in jordan: an evaluation study of visually
impaired users and web developers. Behaviour & In-
formation Technology, 32(3):273–293.
Akram, M. and Sulaiman, R. B. (2017). A systematic liter-
ature review to determine the web accessibility issues
in saudi arabian university and government websites
for disable people. International Journal of Advanced
Computer Science and Applications, 8(6).
Alayed, A., Wald, M., and Draffan, E. (2016). Developing
a framework for localised web accessibility guidelines
for university websites in saudi arabia. In Interna-
tional Conference on Computers Helping People with
Special Needs, pages 243–250. Springer.
Ali, E., Doush, I. A., Alsalem, G. M., and Alrashdan, W.
(2019). Evaluating the web accessibility of university
online registration system: case study jordan. Interna-
tional Journal of Advanced Science and Technology,
13(3):1–16.
Alsalem, G. M. and Doush, I. A. (2018). Access education:
What is needed to have accessible higher education
for students with disabilities in jordan?. International
journal of special education, 33(3):541–561.
Doush, I. A. and AlMeraj, Z. (2019). Evaluating the ac-
cessibility of kuwaiti e-government websites. Jorda-
nian Journal of Computers and Information Technol-
ogy (JJCIT), 5(03).
Fichten, C., Asuncion, J., Robillard, C., Fossey, M., and
Barile, M. (2003). Accessible computer technologies
for students with disabilities in canadian higher edu-
cation. Canadian Journal of Learning and Technol-
ogy/La revue canadienne de l’apprentissage et de la
technologie, 29(2).
Hackett, S. and Parmanto, B. (2005). A longitudinal evalu-
ation of accessibility: higher education web sites. In-
ternet Research.
Hammad, M., Alnabhan, M., Doush, I. A. A., Alsalem,
G. M., Al-Alem, F. A., and Al-awadi, M. M. (2020).
CHIRA 2020 - 4th International Conference on Computer-Human Interaction Research and Applications
200
Evaluating usability and content accessibility for e-
learning websites in the middle east. Interna-
tional Journal of Technology and Human Interaction
(IJTHI), 16(1):54–62.
Hassouna, M. S., Sahari, N., and Ismai, A. (2017). Univer-
sity website accessibility for totally blind users. Jour-
nal of Information and Communication Technology,
16(1):63–80.
Ismail, A. and Kuppusamy, K. (2018). Accessibility of in-
dian universities’ homepages: An exploratory study.
Journal of King Saud University-Computer and Infor-
mation Sciences, 30(2):268–278.
Ismail, A. and Kuppusamy, K. (2019). Web accessibil-
ity investigation and identification of major issues of
higher education websites with statistical measures: A
case study of college websites. Journal of King Saud
University-Computer and Information Sciences.
Ismailova, R. and Inal, Y. (2018). Accessibility evaluation
of top university websites: a comparative study of kyr-
gyzstan, azerbaijan, kazakhstan and turkey. Universal
Access in the Information Society, 17(2):437–445.
Kamal, I. W., Alsmadi, I. M., Wahsheh, H. A., and Al-
Kabi, M. N. (2016). Evaluating web accessibility
metrics for jordanian universities. International Jour-
nal of Advanced Computer Science and Applications,
7(7):113–122.
Kurt, S. (2017). Accessibility of turkish university web
sites. Universal Access in the Information Society,
16(2):505–515.
Paris, M. (2006). Website accessibility: a survey of lo-
cal e-government websites and legislation in northern
ireland. Universal access in the information society,
4(4):292–299.
Web Accessibility of Palestinian Universities: Can We Access Higher Education Information during COVID-19?
201