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Vue accessibility for education and edtech: setup, plugins, and audit checklist

Running an accessible Vue site for education and edtech combines two layers of responsibility: Vue's platform-level accessibility, and the education-specific compliance frameworks — ADA Title II, Section 504 Rehabilitation Act, WCAG 2.1 AA — that layer on top.

Kai Schmidt · IAAP CPACC · Document accessibility specialist (PDF/UA-1)3 min readPublished · Updated

Why Vue for education and edtech?

Vue accessibility means writing semantic templates, using accessible component libraries (Vuetify, Quasar, Headless UI Vue), managing focus on route changes, and applying focus-trap composables for modals — Vue itself imposes nothing but its template-first approach makes semantic markup natural.

Education accessibility — the regulated reality

Education accessibility means that learning management systems, course materials, lecture video, assessment platforms and student-services portals are usable by students and faculty with disabilities — a binding requirement under Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act, Title II of the ADA, and the DOJ's April 2024 final rule mandating WCAG 2.1 AA for state/local government bodies.

Vue accessibility challenges that hit education and edtech hardest

• Custom components

• Transition handling without reduced-motion

Education pain points your Vue site will likely have

• Inaccessible PDF readings and lecture slides

• Live lectures without real-time captions

• Proctoring software incompatible with assistive tech

• Math content as images rather than MathML

• Inaccessible assessment platforms

Setup steps

1. Use semantic templates: Native elements first.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Cited answers. Sourced. Updated as standards and case law change.

  • Can a Vue site be made ADA compliant for education and edtech?

    Yes, provided the merchant or development team applies WCAG 2.2 AA at the source code and content level. No platform — including Vue — guarantees compliance automatically.

  • Does the DOJ April 2024 Title II rule apply to public universities?

    Yes. Public universities and community colleges are state or local government entities under Title II of the ADA. The April 2024 final rule requires WCAG 2.1 AA conformance, with compliance dates of April 2026 (large entities, >50K residents) or April 2027 (smaller).

  • Do private universities have the same accessibility obligations?

    Private universities are typically covered by ADA Title III (public accommodations) and Section 504 if they receive federal financial assistance — which nearly all do. The functional standard is the same: WCAG 2.1/2.2 AA conformance.

  • Is Vue accessible?

    As accessible as the components written.

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