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(o) A method shall be
provided that permits users to skip repetitive navigation links.
Why do navigational links present
impediments to screen readers and other types of assistive technologies?
This provision provides a method to facilitate the easy tracking of page content
that provides users of assistive technology the option to skip repetitive
navigation links. Web developers routinely place a host of routine navigational
links at a standard location – often across the top, bottom, or side of a page.
If a nondisabled user returns to a web page and knows that he or she wants to
view the contents of that particular page instead of selecting a navigation link
to go to another page, he or she may simply look past the links and begin
reading wherever the desired text is located. For those who use screen readers
or other types of assistive technologies, however, it can be a tedious and
time-consuming chore to wait for the assistive technology to work through and
announce each of the standard navigational links before getting to the intended
location. In order to alleviate this problem, the section 508 rule requires that
when repetitive navigational links are used, there must be a mechanism for users
to skip repetitive navigational links.
Example: USDA Target Center and DOL
websites use the Skip Repetitive Navigational Links.
http://www.usda.gov/oo/target

http://www.dol.gov/odep/welcome.html

Back
Skip Navigation Links
If the page has a top or
side border, or navigation links at the top or side of the page, provide a means
to skip to the main information of the page. In FrontPage, the easiest way to
meet this criterion is to create a "main" bookmark just before the main header
of the page. To create a bookmark, click where you want the bookmark to go, then
choose insert, bookmark. Name the bookmark "main" or "main information," if you
name it anything else rating programs will not recognize it as meeting this
criterion. Next, return to the top of the page and insert a link. Choose "link
to a place in this document" from the left of the link dialog box in FrontPage
2002 (or "bookmark" in earlier versions) and then select the "main" bookmark.
Choose "OK."
- Notes on skip links: If the page
you are working on has a top border of some sort, I have
found that the Texas A&M at
Galveston logo or some other top most picture works well for this since it
eliminates the unaesthetic link at the top of a site, still meets the
criteria for assessability readers, and most people who can see would not
normally try to click in that
region.
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