The presenter spoke quite quickly,and there was a lot of points on the slides, so I didn’t catch everything. I also focused more on design aspects than anything else.
Defining Inclusive Design
- design that is inclusive of the full range of human diversity with respect to ability, language, culture, gender, age, and other forms of human difference
 - designing for diversity
 
Digital Exclusion
- access to online systems no longer an option
 - estimated social and economic cost of digital exclusion
 - required for government, commerce, education ,etc.
 
Bridging the Gap
- developers design for the typical or average user
 - Assistive technology (AT) is intended to bridge the gap to reach anyone that requires alternative access systems
 - this bridge is inadequate: only some disabilities and only reaches a few countries
 
Specialized Assistive Technology
- 28% of the world
 - rising in cost
 - decreasing in availability
 
Accessibility Legislation
- necessary foundation for systematic change
 - AODA groundbreaking approach to legislating accessibility
 - but currently
- hard to update
 - hard to keep current
 - accessibility requirements seen to constrain innovation
 - fear of implementing new technologies
 - one-size-fits-all solution
 
 
Global Consensus
- need new approach
 - especially with an aging population, which needs more alternatives as they grow older
 
True Accessibility
- ability of the service or environment to adopt to the user’s needs
 - flexibility and adaptability are key
 - Concept: Global Public Inclusive Infrastructure (GPII)
 - reduce barriers
 - enables diversity and innovation
 
Need New Approach
- more inclusive of full diversity of learners
 - more relevant to educational demands
 - more timely and continuously renewable
 - contextualized or embedded in learner’s context