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Testing Accessibility is a self-paced course for building accessibility into web applications, taught by accessibility expert Marcy Sutton and operated by Skill Recordings Inc. Rather than focusing on a single tool, the course aims to help teams establish an end-to-end accessibility workflow covering design review, semantic implementation, manual testing, automated testing, and CI-based release blocking.
The course is divided into Foundation, Core, and Professional tiers. The full Professional package includes 6 workshops: accessibility fundamentals, design thinking and communication, manual accessibility testing, HTML/ARIA semantic markup, accessible interaction development, and automated accessibility testing. Materials include written lessons, supplementary video clips, transcripts, practice challenges and solutions, plus complete source code. Technically, it covers keyboard testing, DevTools, browser extensions, screen readers, React, Storybook, Jest, Cypress, and continuous integration.
The page shows three package tiers, all as one-time purchases with lifetime access, but the captured text lists prices as “Loading price,” so the actual costs cannot be determined. Service terms include a 30-day full refund, team seats, invoice customization after purchase, email support, gift licenses, and paid upgrades by covering the price difference. PPP regional discounts are determined automatically based on IP, but discounted purchases are restricted to access from the country of purchase, which cross-border teams should note.
The strengths are its comprehensive structure: it covers WCAG, ARIA, and semantic structure while also emphasizing issue discovery during the design stage, stakeholder communication, and building an organizational accessibility culture. It is also highly practical, using real application exercises to identify, fix, and prevent accessibility issues from recurring. The downsides are that no certification or certificate information is apparent, and the instruction language is English. The advanced development sections use React; while the concepts can be transferred to other tech stacks, doing so requires additional effort. The lack of clearly displayed pricing also reduces purchase transparency.
It is suitable for frontend developers, web teams, accessibility leads, product/design collaborators, and anyone looking to build an accessibility champion network within an organization. For users in China, the captured text does not provide information on network accessibility or payment methods, so access status can only be considered unknown. Before paying, users should confirm direct site access, available payment channels, and PPP restrictions. Alternatives to consider include Deque University, WebAIM, W3C WAI resources, and Chinese frontend accessibility practice materials.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on testingaccessibility.com official site.
testingaccessibility.com is an United States Education provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 7.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach testingaccessibility.com directly.