Accessible Technology Workshop Series
Presented by:
Kyle Chapman - CAFE
Andrea Bell - ASC
http://www.colour-blindness.com/general/prevalence/
Font designed for people with dyslexia:
Right-click image, choose "Format Picture", click "Alt Text"
Microsoft has its own tool for checking accessibility:
...use styles and headings
...put alternate text on images
...give links descriptive names
...try the Accessibility Checker
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Videos may not have captioning: affects Deaf/Hard of Hearing students, ESL students, LD students, and those sitting near the back of the class that can't hear.
Consider: use a link to YouTube and enable the captions
or
Try adding your own captions using this free tool:
STAMP add-in for PowerPoint
Consider:
If you were doing readings in class; would you expect the students to bring their books?
...use tags (which are basically styles)
...put alternate text on images/figures
...give links descriptive names
...a table of contents is a good idea
Acrobat Professional can be requested from I.T. for your workstation at no cost
The Tags pane allows you to see how your text and other sections have been tagged.
Tags help with navigation, much the same way that styles/headings do.
image source: http://www.queensu.ca/accessibility/how-info/accessible-documents/creating-accessible-pdfs-windows
The Order pane allows you to view and specify the order that the blocks of text (or images) should be viewed in.
This is very important for anyone using a screen-reader but also essential for any PDF form that should be filled in.
You can access this by selecting Tools, then Advanced, then Accessibility, then Full Check
image source: http://helpx.adobe.com/acrobat/using/create-verify-pdf-accessibility.html
source: http://blog.bargirangin.com/2013/03/a-comparison-of-learning-management.html
Embedded documents are quick and easy to post but
The Create a File option avoids these issues.
This editor takes fairly good care of big accessibility concerns, so don't panic when you're using it!
Of course, we have tips regardless.
...use styles and headings
...put alternate text on images/figures
...give links descriptive names
...bulleted lists and tables are useful for grouping information
...be aware of font size, style and colour
Styles in HTML work much the same as in Word.
By default, this menu says "Paragraph": that is the name of the default style.
DC Connect actually forces you to enter alternate text for every image!
You must enter alternative text for an image unless you specify that the image is decorative.
No image that has meaning should be marked decorative!
WCAG: Web Content Accessibility Guidelines
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Please direct any questions to:
andrea.bell@durhamcollege.ca
kyle.chapman@durhamcollege.ca