“…Many recommendations for the design of accessible eLearning contents have been delivered by international standard organizations, as well as private educational initiatives worldwide [6] [7][8] [12]. However, their level of abstraction as well as their quantity, can make it very hard for educators, who might not have prior expertise on accessibility, to effectively incorporate them into their everyday authoring practices [9]. Also, compliance of a specific web content to guidelines, as it might be assessed by the most commonly used accessibility checkers, like Bobbly [3], Lift [4], A-Prompt [5] etc., is not sufficient for eLearning material, since these tools mainly perform a syntactic assessment of web pages, but say nothing about the adequacy of any equivalent-alternative contents created, to enable effective access to this materials by disabled users during learning.…”