Title: Did this ever get an accessibility review?
Last modified: March 15, 2017

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# Did this ever get an accessibility review?

 *  [sleeplessindc](https://wordpress.org/support/users/sleeplessindc/)
 * (@sleeplessindc)
 * [9 years, 1 month ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/did-this-ever-get-an-accessibility-review/)
 * Twenty Seventeen is a beautiful theme but it isn’t accessible. It’s not usable
   for corporate sites that have to comply with Federal government accessibility
   requirements. The description tags for this theme have “Accessibility ready” 
   but that does not mean it is accessible.
 * I can’t imagine why the developers designed it with no sidebar on the homepage.
   Because the header image fills the window and doesn’t even show the navigation
   menu or down arrow, most users aren’t going to know that to go anywhere on the
   site, they must scroll down. Clicking on the image does nothing.
 * For accessibility, it has a lot of problems for screen readers and others who
   use tabbing for navigating a site and no screen reader help. The first tab takes
   me to the bottom of the first section and not to the top navigation menu, the
   second tab does nothing, the third tab takes me to the middle of the second section
   instead of the header for that section. The fifth tab takes me to the middle 
   of the featured image and the top of the third section (better). The seventh 
   tab takes me to the full screen featured image with no header. The third, fifth,
   and seventh tabs take you to various pieces of the second, third, and fourth 
   sections but still doesn’t let users know where they are on the site or know 
   they are still on the home page. The second, fourth, and sixth tabs do nothing.
   Non-exploring users are not going to know where they are or how to get anywhere
   else. The first tab should take users to the navigation menu. The first section
   of the Home page should have a sidebar so users know how to log on–that’s completely
   hidden until you have a long scroll down because None of the tabs take you to
   the bottom of the page for the widgets there. I’ll be getting a lot of “How do
   I log on?” questions. (It obviously never had an accessibility review, which 
   I thought was required for all new themes or should be for all Twenty-something
   themes to meet coding standards.)
 * I’d be happy with front page sidebars that are short to allow corporate items
   required and at least a navigation list or logon box in the sidebar with a Note
   link at the bottom of the sidebar that says something like: the full sidebar 
   can be seen on the individual pages shown in this front page section. Probably
   easier to implement would be to have at least a sidebar that does that on just
   the first section (Home).
 * Useable tabbing or a link to the bottom widgets would be helpful.
    -  This topic was modified 9 years, 1 month ago by [sleeplessindc](https://wordpress.org/support/users/sleeplessindc/).
    -  This topic was modified 9 years, 1 month ago by [sleeplessindc](https://wordpress.org/support/users/sleeplessindc/).

Viewing 1 replies (of 1 total)

 *  [David A. Kennedy](https://wordpress.org/support/users/davidakennedy/)
 * (@davidakennedy)
 * [9 years ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/did-this-ever-get-an-accessibility-review/#post-9030823)
 * Hi [@sleeplessindc](https://wordpress.org/support/users/sleeplessindc/),
 * Thanks for using Twenty Seventeen!
 * > Twenty Seventeen is a beautiful theme but it isn’t accessible. It’s not usable
   > for corporate sites that have to comply with Federal government accessibility
   > requirements. The description tags for this theme have “Accessibility ready”
   > but that does not mean it is accessible.
 * Members of the WordPress community tested the theme according to these [accessibility standards](https://make.wordpress.org/themes/handbook/review/accessibility/).
   A theme can’t be fully accessible because much of that relies on a site’s content.
   But the theme is as accessible as it can be so if you need to make an accessible
   site, it can be done so.
 * > For accessibility, it has a lot of problems for screen readers and others who
   > use tabbing for navigating a site and no screen reader help. The first tab 
   > takes me to the bottom of the first section and not to the top navigation menu,
   > the second tab does nothing, the third tab takes me to the middle of the second
   > section instead of the header for that section. The fifth tab takes me to the
   > middle of the featured image and the top of the third section (better). The
   > seventh tab takes me to the full screen featured image with no header. The 
   > third, fifth, and seventh tabs take you to various pieces of the second, third,
   > and fourth sections but still doesn’t let users know where they are on the 
   > site or know they are still on the home page. The second, fourth, and sixth
   > tabs do nothing. Non-exploring users are not going to know where they are or
   > how to get anywhere else.
 * I’m not able to replicate this using the theme’s [official demo site](http://2017.wordpress.net/).
   Tabbing for me goes in order of the content areas as I would expect.
 * > I’ll be getting a lot of “How do I log on?” questions. (It obviously never 
   > had an accessibility review, which I thought was required for all new themes
   > or should be for all Twenty-something themes to meet coding standards.)
 * If logging into WordPress is important to your users, you can add it as a link
   to your main menu with Custom Menus in the Customizer. If you need help on that,
   [see this guide](https://codex.wordpress.org/WordPress_Menu_User_Guide).

Viewing 1 replies (of 1 total)

The topic ‘Did this ever get an accessibility review?’ is closed to new replies.

 * ![](https://i0.wp.com/themes.svn.wordpress.org/twentyseventeen/4.0/screenshot.
   png)
 * Twenty Seventeen
 * [Support Threads](https://wordpress.org/support/theme/twentyseventeen/)
 * [Active Topics](https://wordpress.org/support/theme/twentyseventeen/active/)
 * [Unresolved Topics](https://wordpress.org/support/theme/twentyseventeen/unresolved/)
 * [Reviews](https://wordpress.org/support/theme/twentyseventeen/reviews/)

 * 1 reply
 * 2 participants
 * Last reply from: [David A. Kennedy](https://wordpress.org/support/users/davidakennedy/)
 * Last activity: [9 years ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/did-this-ever-get-an-accessibility-review/#post-9030823)