AmyJune Hineline Releases Accessibility Microlearning for Open Source Contributors
A new accessibility microlearning course for open-source contributors has been released by the Linux Foundation, focusing on practical habits that contributors can apply across projects.
AmyJune Hineline has released the 15-minute course, Accessibility Fundamentals for Open Source Contributors, which introduces four immediate checks for improving accessibility in documentation, code, and community work. Topics include writing meaningful alt text, using clear and globally understandable English, verifying keyboard accessibility, and maintaining accessible documentation practices.
AmyJune describes the initiative as focused on practical inclusion rather than regulatory compliance. The course is designed to support broader participation in open-source by reducing barriers for users and contributors with diverse abilities and linguistic backgrounds.
The microlearning format provides a concise, task-oriented introduction suitable for contributors across roles, including developers, documentation writers, maintainers, and community organisers. By focusing on small, repeatable habits, the training aims to make accessibility improvements more approachable for contributors at all experience levels.
Registration details are available on the Linux Foundation Training Portal.


