WCAG 3.0, is known as W3C Accessibility Guidelines. It provides a wide range of recommendations for making web content more accessible to users with disabilities.
Following these guidelines will address many of the needs of users with blindness, low vision and other vision impairments; deafness and hearing loss; limited movement and dexterity; speech disabilities; sensory disorders; cognitive and learning disabilities; and combinations of these.
These guidelines address accessibility of web content on desktops, laptops, tablets, mobile devices, wearable devices, and other web of things devices.
The guidelines apply to various types of web content including static, dynamic, interactive, and streaming content; visual and auditory media; virtual and augmented reality; and alternative access presentation and control. These guidelines also address related web tools such as user agents (browsers and assistive technologies), content management systems, authoring tools, and testing tools.
We cover this as part of our Digital Accessibility Specialist Level 4 Apprenticeship Programme along with many other modules.
Visit our programme page for more information