199x Filetype PPTX File size 1.86 MB Source: www.oise.utoronto.ca
Contents This resource is based on Microsoft’s accessibility guide and accessible PowerPoint template. It is designed to be used as a template as well as a guide to make your own accessible templates. Contents of this guide are listed below: • Start with an Access Check • Color accessibility rules for Charts and SmartArt • Alt text accessibility rules for Pictures • Alt text accessibility rules for Charts • Alt text accessibility rules for SmartArt • Accessibility rules for Tables • Basic Accessibility Rules • More Basic Accessibility Rules • Learn more about PowerPoint Accessibility Start with an Access Check Plan in advance to make it easier for learners with diverse abilities to follow along and participate. For example: Describing wayfinding and physical access and when replying to questions about adapting content for user needs. 1. Start sessions with an access check. Share 4. Announce yourself and check your volume and information about accessibility features speaking speed with learners. Inform everyone only available for the session and any changes. one person at a time will be speaking. Ask learners For example: ASL interpretation, live to identify themselves before speaking. Mention to captions, transcript availability, accessible virtual participants that they should mute documents, accessible video, platform themselves when they are not speaking. accessibility, captions, subtitles, recordings 5. Remind all participants to describe images, videos and facilities maintenance. and slides in plain language without relying on 2. Provide learners opportunities to privately learners being able to see the content or perceive ask for help with accessibility. colour and with explanations that make sense when read aloud by screen readers or when speech is converted to text in transcripts or captions. Mention opportunities to use chat to participate. Color Accessibility Rules for Charts and SmartArt 1. Some people can’t see certain colors, so 2. If colors need to be changed to pass the analyzer, text, tables, and SmartArt need to pass a change the chart design or color scheme instead of test that measures these color differences. changing the colors directly. To change these, You can download a color contrast select your chart and go to Chart Tools > Design analyzer from the web. To test using this > Chart Styles or Change Colors. tool, just select the color foreground and background you need and see if it passes! Failing color contrast Passing color contrast Alt Text Accessibility Rules for Pictures All your pictures and tables need appropriate descriptive alternative text (known as “alt text”) that doesn’t use the words “photo” or “graphic”. To add alt text, right click on your picture and select Format Picture, then go to Size & Properties > Alt Text and add alt text only to the Description field. Alt text examples for pictures on this slide: 1. A women and girl gardening 1 2. Sand dune in light and shadow 2 3. Basketball players raising hands together 3 Alt Text Accessibility Rules for Charts All charts also need to have alt text. To add alt Alt text examples for two different chart types on text to a chart, right click on the chart and select this slide: Format Chart Area which will open the Format 1. Line chart showing values of three series for Chart Area pane, then go to Size & Properties > four categories Alt Text and enter your alt text only into the 2. Clustered column chart showing values of Description field. three series for four categories 6 5 6 4 5 3 4 2 3 1 2 0 1 Category 1 Category 2 Category 3 Category 4 Series 1 Series 2 Series 3 0 Category 1 Category 2 Category 3 Category 4 Series 1 Series 2 Series 3
no reviews yet
Please Login to review.