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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Enhancing Learning Management Systems Utility for Blind Students: A Task-Oriented, User-Centered, Multi-Method Evaluation Technique.

TLDR
It is demonstrated how TUME can be used to identify the unique problems and challenges of specific user types in using Web-based applications and suggests po-tential solutions.
Abstract
This paper presents a novel task-oriented, user-centered, multi-method evaluation (TUME) tech-nique and shows how it is useful in providing a more complete, practical and solution-oriented assessment of the accessibility and usability of Learning Management Systems (LMS) for blind and visually impaired (BVI) students. Novel components of TUME include a purposeful integra-tion of a multi-theoretic foundation and multiple methods to accurately identify users’ accessibil-ity and usability problems in Web interaction and identify design problems and solutions to en-sure technical feasibility of recommendations. The problems identified by TUME remain hidden from extant evaluation methods - therefore, these problems remain in Web-based applications. As a result, evaluation of Web-based applications remains confounded by users’ Web interaction challenges; their utility for specific user types remains unclear. Without appropriate evaluation of users’ problems and challenges in using Web-based applications, we cannot begin to solve these problems and challenges. This paper demonstrates how TUME can be used to identify the unique problems and challenges of specific user types in using Web-based applications and suggests po-tential solutions. The outcome is an accurate understanding of specific design elements that pre-sent roadblocks and challenges for the user in interacting with the Web-based application and feasible design modifications to potentially improve the utility of these applications for specific user types.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Enhancing usability of digital libraries: Designing help features to support blind and visually impaired users

TL;DR: The findings of this study show that the experimental group encountered fewer number of help-seeking situations than the control group when interacting with the experimental and baseline versions of a DL.
Journal ArticleDOI

Haze in the digital library: design issues hampering accessibility for blind users

Rakesh Babu, +1 more
TL;DR: This paper raises awareness of design choices that can unintentionally bar blind information seekers from DL access, and further suggests solutions to reduce these design problems for blind users.
Dissertation

Understanding accessibility problems of blind users on the web

Andreas Savva
TL;DR: This research aims to provide a further understanding of the problems blind users have on the web by comparing and contrasting problems between blind and sighted users and testing how design solutions to prevalent problems benefit blind users’ experience.

Can Blind People Use Social Media Effectively? A Qualitative Field Study of Facebook Usability

TL;DR: It shows how blind users think, act and perceive in performing common social media functions non-visually, and has implications for the design of non-visual user interfaces to access social media through ‘Internet of Things’ and in multi-tasking situations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Blind Students' Challenges in Social Media Communication: An Early Investigation of Facebook Usability for Informal Learning

TL;DR: Results show that locating Friend's profile and Timeline, reading, writing, and posting messages were significantly challenging, and participants needed additional time and effort to perform these basic SNS functions that are integral parts of informal learning activities.
References
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Book

The hidden lives of learners

TL;DR: In this article, a metodo unico de recoleccion de data a traves de registro meticuloso -a traves of audio, video, observaciones, entrevistas, ensayos, and pruebas -and el cotejo y analisis of lo que ocurre dentro and fuera de la sala de clases.
Proceedings Article

A paradigm shift: alternative interaction techniques for use with mobile & wearable devices

TL;DR: Why it is necessary to embrace a paradigm shift in terms of interaction techniques for mobile technology and two novel multimodal interaction techniques which are effective alternatives to traditional, visual-centric interface designs on mobile devices as empirical examples of the potential to achieve this shift are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Student Interaction with Online Course Content: Build It and They Might Come

TL;DR: Investigation of student patterns of access to instructional resources provided in an asynchronous online digital literacy course offered at a regional university in the United States indicates that students selectively access course content based upon the degree to which they perceive it will positively influence performance and outcomes on assignments and assessments.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

A comparison of voice controlled and mouse controlled web browsing

TL;DR: The study shows that voice control adds approximately 50% to the performance time for certain types of tasks and subjective satisfaction measures indicate that for voice browsing, textual links are preferable to numbered links.
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