Creating Accessible PowerPoint Presentations
Peter Mosinskis
Supervisor of Web Services
CSU Channel Islands
Rev. 2008-11-14
Speaker Notes:
Overview
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Why Accessible?
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Hands-On
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8 Steps for PowerPoint Accessibility
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LK4 Wizard and LecShare Pro
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Speaker Notes:
Why Make Information Accessible?
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“Access for all”
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Forward-thinking
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Scalable
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Manage Risk
Speaker Notes:
8 Steps
Simple = Easy
Speaker Notes:
Eight Steps to Accessibility
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Create text descriptions for photos and diagrams
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Use color correctly
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Use Slide Layout for slide structure
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Use appropriate font formatting
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Make tables and diagrams accessible
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Address multimedia, video and audio issues
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Add document metadata
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Provide in both PPT and HTML formats
Speaker Notes:
1. Text Description of Images
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Text description of meaningful non-text elements (such as images or diagrams)
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Right-click on an object/image
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Choose “Format Picture”
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Choose “Web” tab
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Enter text description
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Click “OK”
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Speaker Notes:
How would you describe this?
Example Figure 1
Speaker Notes:
Tips
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Determine if purely decorative or meaningful/descriptive…
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First ask “who should describe this?”
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Are you qualified to come up with a description?
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If not, contact the originator of the information to provide a written description.
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Short description
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“G-protein coupled receptor”
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Long Description
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“The GPCR is pictured here spanning a cell membrane and binding a neurotransmitter molecule.”
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Finally ask, “is this good enough for the intended audience?”
Speaker Notes:
How would you describe this?
Example Figure 2
Speaker Notes:
Tips
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Determine if purely decorative or meaningful/descriptive…
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Ask “Who should describe this?”
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Write a Short Description
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“Diagram of the conversion from embryo to stem cell”
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Write Long Description
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Should at least contain all of the text in the chart
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Should go in body text, before or directly after the diagram
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Ask, “is this good enough for the intended audience?”, if not, revise it.
Speaker Notes:
How to Describe Things
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How to Create Descriptive Text
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Describing Fine Art
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Describing Things You Hear
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Speaker Notes:
2. Use color correctly
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Examine two color issues
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Color words
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Color contrast
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Speaker Notes:
Color Issue #1 – Color Words
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Never depend on color alone to convey your content: search for color words and replace them with text or text symbols
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WRONG:
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“See the red section for additional information”
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CORRECT:
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“See the section titled ‘More Info’ for additional information”
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Speaker Notes:
Color Issue #2 - Color Contrast
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Best practice for color contrast:
black text on white or 10% grey background -
This is the example!
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The text has good color contrast with the background
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It is easy to read the text
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Speaker Notes:
Poor Color Contrast
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Here is a slide which shows text
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The text has poor color contrast with the background
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It is difficult to read the text
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Further, light-colored text does not export well using the Virtual508 Wizard
Speaker Notes:
Testing Color Contrast
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TPG Colour Contrast Analyzer
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Free download:
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Windows + Mac
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Compare background and foreground colors
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Minimum: meets both WCAG “AA” checks
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Recommended: meets “AA” and “AAA” checks
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Speaker Notes:
Fixing Color Contrast
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Change font color:
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Highlight text
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Click on the “Font Color” icon
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Choose “Automatic”
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Speaker Notes:
Fixing Color Contrast (cont.)
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Change background using Slide Designs!
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Format menu >
Slide Design… -
Choose a design
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Choose “Apply to All Slides” or “Apply to Selected Slides”
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Choose one that has good color contrast!
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Speaker Notes:
3. Use Slide Layouts
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Default slide layouts are available for the most common slide types
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Examples:
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Title slide
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Title and text (usually bullets)
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Title and 2-column text
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Speaker Notes:
Use Slide Layouts (cont.)
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Will maintain correct bullets and numbering
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Easy to change layout of a given slide
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Easy to modify globally
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View menu > Master > Slide Master
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Speaker Notes:
4. Use Appropriate Font Formatting
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Quick Fix:
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Format >
Slide Layout… -
Click the dropdown menu for a layout
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Choose
“Reapply Layout”
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Speaker Notes:
Use Appropriate Font Formatting
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Font sizes should be 20 point or larger
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Use standard typefaces
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Arial/Helvetica (basic sans serif)
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Times/Times New Roman (basic serif)
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Avoid “script” or fantasy typefaces
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Use no more than 2 font families per document
Speaker Notes:
Use Appropriate Font Formatting
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Use bold and italic styles judiciously
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Rule of thumb: no more than 2 sentences in a row in any paragraph
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Avoid using “underline” text altogether
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Too easily confused with links
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Speaker Notes:
5. Table Best Practices
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Use tables, not tabs for grid-like data
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Use row and column headings
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Develop a brief summary of the table
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Equivalent to short text descriptions of images
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Speaker Notes:
Diagrams
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Write out a complete description of the diagram
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Include the description in the Slide Notes section
Speaker Notes:
Diagram Example
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The Slide Notes section is shown below
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It appears below each slide
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Add notes to describe your diagram in sufficient detail
Speaker Notes:
6. Multimedia, Animations, Flash
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Avoid text/graphics that move
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If required, allow user to initiate movement (e.g., play an animation)
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Avoid text/graphics that blink or flash
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May cause seizures in some people
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Speaker Notes:
Video Clips
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Embedded video clips must be captioned
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Provide an electronic transcript along with the video file
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Best practices:
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Do not embed video
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Use a local or a web link to link to the captioned video file
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Provide a link to the viewer for the video file type
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Speaker Notes:
Audio Clips
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Determine whether an audio clip is:
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Purely decorative OR
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Meaningful/descriptive
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Meaningful/descriptive audio clips must include a transcript
Speaker Notes:
7. Add document metadata
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Go to File menu
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Choose Properties…
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Enter in a descriptive, accurate title (most important)
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Add other metadata as desired
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Click OK
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Save your document
Speaker Notes:
Prompt for File Properties
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Go to “Tools” menu
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Choose “Options”
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Go to “Save” tab
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Check “Prompt for file properties” checkbox
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Do this for every Office application (Word, Excel, PowerPoint)
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Excel: “General” tab, “Prompt for Workbook Properties”
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Word: Save tab, “Prompt for Document Properties”
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Speaker Notes:
8. Deliver in 2 Formats
“As-is” PowerPoint + HTML
Speaker Notes:
“As-is” PowerPoint
Pros & Cons
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Pros
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Familiar interface and tools
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No modifications from original file
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Can search entire PPT for information easily
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Fairly accessible when done correctly
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Cons
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Requires users to install full version PowerPoint on their computer; free PowerPoint Reader is not accessible
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MS PowerPoint/Office is not cheap/free
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Not everyone has MS PowerPoint/Office version
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Can’t automate compliance checks
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Speaker Notes:
HTML Pros & Cons
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Pros
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Can view with web browser
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Best support of assistive technology
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Most accessible solution when done correctly
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Can partially automate compliance checking
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Tools are available to help with HTML generation (LecShare, Virtual508 Wizard)
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Cons
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Can’t easily search entire presentation
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Requires working knowledge of HTML or HTML editing software
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Speaker Notes:
Accessibility Spectrum
“As-is”
PPT + HTML
HTML
“As-is” PPT
MORE ACCESSIBLE
Speaker Notes:
Best Strategy
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Provide files in both HTML and “as-is” especially when building content for web sites
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If only one format possible, provide as HTML
Speaker Notes:
Tools
To help with Step #8
Speaker Notes:
PowerPoint Tools
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LK4 Virtual508 Wizard
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LecShare Pro
Speaker Notes:
LK4 Virtual 508 Wizard
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Formerly “UIUC PowerPoint Wizard”
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Plug-in for MS PowerPoint/MS Office
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Affordably priced (~$40/copy)
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IT has some free copies available (~20)
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Windows only!
Speaker Notes:
LecShare Pro
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www.lecshare.com/
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Standalone application, requires PowerPoint
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CSUCI has a campus-wide license, i.e., all employees and students can use
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Windows and Mac
Speaker Notes:
How Tools Will Help
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Both tools will
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Check descriptions of images & charts
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Add descriptions to images
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Add metadata to the document
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Convert to HTML & maintain slide layout
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Speaker Notes:
Differences between PPT Tools
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LK4 Wizard will
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Provide multiple HTML output options
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Create printable handouts
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LecShare will
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Help make tables & charts accessible
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Provide multiple other output options (Quicktime, etc)
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Enable presenter to record slide narration and add captions
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Speaker Notes:
Tools will NOT help
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Ensure image descriptions are meaningful/sufficient
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Semantic/markup problems
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Solve color problems
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Create accessible audio/video
Speaker Notes:
Known Issues & Alternatives
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Mac PowerPoint
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Cannot add text descriptions to images/diagrams
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Created on a Mac?
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Export as HTML using LecShare
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Speaker Notes:
Either Way…
Complex = difficult to make accessible
Speaker Notes:
Summary
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Some manual evaluation/repair is always required
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Tools can help automate some tasks
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Simple = easy = good
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Keep users in mind
Speaker Notes:
Other Related Workshops
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Creating Accessible Word documents
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Creating Accessible PDFs I
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Creating Accessible PDF II (Forms)
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Web Accessibility I & II
Speaker Notes:
Resources
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CSUCI Web Accessibility –
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Georgia Tech Access E-Learning modules:
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Section508.gov –
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WebAIM –
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CATS Listserv – subscribe at
Speaker Notes:
Questions
Contact the Help Desk
805-437-8552
Speaker Notes: