

The Insert key is the default special "NVDA key" for using the keyboard to navigate with NVDA.

F5 refreshes the page and starts reading from the beginning (in case you get lost).I use these tips a lot for testing web pages with NVDA: NVDA has a Help menu and highly detailed user guide, but WebAIM's " Using NVDA to Evaluate Web Accessibility" is the quick-start guide I wish I'd started with. This video includes how-to's and some demonstration: Switch to a web browser, and it will read the web pages you visit. When you start it up, it begins reading what you have on screen out loud. It can be installed and used without admin rights (though enlisting an admin for the install let me use it without having to accept the terms of use every time) or even saved to a portable USB flash drive to run on different computers. To get started using NVDA, download it to your Windows computer. A free choice for this is NonVisual Desktop Access (usually abbreviated as NVDA). Another important option to include in your accessibility testing toolset is a screen reader and keyboard, to help understand how a visitor with visual or motor disabilities might experience the library's website. Automated tools for checking website accessibility (such as WAVE, AChecker or the aXe Chrome extension) are often the starting point to find and correct accessibility violations.
