Comment by akk0
3 days ago
I think "act like it's ridiculous" is pretty hyperbolic here. I didn't know what ARIA stood for until now (though I knew what it was).
You'd be surprised how many people barely know it exists... I was a TA for my uni's Web Engineering and Ethics in CS courses and accessibility never even came up in either course.
> I was a TA for my uni's Web Engineering and Ethics in CS courses and accessibility never even came up in either course.
That is genuinely baffling to me. How does a university teach web engineering without even mentioning accessibility? It’s not just best practice—it’s often a legal requirement for public-sector sites in many countries. Even outside government work, major companies (FAANG included) publicly invest in accessibility to avoid both reputational and legal fallout. Ignoring it entirely sends the wrong message to students about professional responsibility and real-world standards.
Many schools are not very good at teaching real world skills. Always been this way.
It’s why ‘self taught’ in many disciplines is very doable too, if someone focuses on what people actually want/need.
They might not be good at articulating the differences between fizzbuzz and bubble sort, but they can get shit done that works.
Every PhD that I know that went from Academia to Industry immediately had their stress levels decrease 10x and their pay roughly double too - because they could finally do a thing, see if it worked or not, and if it did, get paid more.
Instead of insane constant bullshitting and reputation management/politics with a hint of real application maybe sprinkled in. Few ‘knives’ have to be as sharp as the academics, in my experience.
Didn’t come up in my ethics course either. Unless you actually know someone with an accessibility issue, it’s unlikely you have encountered it or recognized it if you did.
For example: You don’t realize how absolutely abysmal voice control is for computers until you have to use it.
There are so many assumptions about the world that causes things like neurodivergence to become a disability instead of a difference.
Not knowing about ARIA is like not knowing about requirements for ramp slopes when designing a building. You just... can't.
> * I think "act like it's ridiculous" is pretty hyperbolic here.*
Fair. I might’ve read more snark in the “Apparently,” than the commenter intended to convey.
For what it’s worth, the comment you read is the toned down version of what I had initially come up with. I really don’t think being dismissive of accessibility concerns is good style.
Yeah, I knew “aria” was “accessibility stuff”, but I couldn’t tell you what it stood for.
Tbh I really don't think it matters what the letters stand for.
You made me realize it's like NASA: a good chunk of the worlds knows it, but I bet most don't know what it stands for (at least outside the US I bet 99.9% don't know -- me included haha)
1 reply →
[dead]