4. Create accessible social media, documents and presentations

There are a lot of excellent step-by-step online guides on increasing the accessibility of different kinds of content. Here are our top tips for social media, documents and presentations.

Social media

Social media is one of the places where it’s easiest to forget about accessibility because it’s so personal and immediate. Many of us use social media to share things about our daily lives, to talk with our friends and to upload photos and videos. Depending on how public your profiles are, your audience may be much larger than you expect. Practicing increasing the accessibility of your content on social media is an excellent way to get into good habits.

Social media is often image heavy, which can disadvantage people with visual impairments or slow internet connections. One way to provide a better experience with your social media posts is to provide a text alternative, or alt-text, for your photos. This is easy to do, and X (Twitter) and Facebook both have guides on how to do it.

Hashtags can also be inaccessible. Hashtags can be difficult for people with cognitive or visual impairments to read because of the way the words run together. An easy way to make hashtags more accessible is to capitalise each word in the hashtag to make it easier to read. This type of formatting is referred to as camelCase. For example, #weloveaccessibility would become #WeLoveAccessibility. This also helps avoid accidentally creating hashtags that go viral for all the wrong reasons.

Our Social media module  has more information on creating social media content.


Documents and assignments

There are things that you can do to make your written work more accessible, whether you are using Microsoft Word or other editing software.

Quick tips to make your documents more accessible:

  • Add alt text to images, drawings, and other graphics – this provides screen reader users with an audio description of what’s on screen.
  • Use built-in headings and styles – this preserves tab order and makes it easier for screen readers to read your document, as well as generate automatic tables of contents for long assignments.
  • Use a simple table structure and include a heading row rather than start with data in the first row.
  • Add meaningful hyperlink text – screen readers can scan for links, so informative link text is helpful.
  • Ensure that colour is not the only means of conveying information – people who are blind, have low vision, or are colorblind might miss out on the meaning conveyed by particular colors.
  • Use sufficient contrast for text and background colours – high level of contrast between text and images makes it easier to read and comprehend.

idea Document guides

Microsoft Word and Google Docs have step-by-step guides on how to make your content accessible.

video  Microsoft Office Accessibility for beginners (LinkedIn Learning, 24m 4s, UQ log-in required) explains the steps for making accessible content with Microsoft tools.

There are also Word add-ons to help improve accessibility as you work. Vision Australia’s Document Accessibility Toolbar is an excellent example that is used around the world.

Portable Document format (PDF)

If you are reading or editing documents in Portable Document Format (PDF), there are some barriers to accessibility. Often, PDFs cannot be read by a screen reader, and they can be difficult to read on mobile devices. This is because PDFs are essentially image files meant to preserve exact formatting and not to be edited as text. There are several steps you can take to make PDFs more accessible, the most useful being optical character recognition (OCR).

OCR scans a PDF document and recognises text, turning it into a format that can be edited. This feature is available on Adobe Acrobat Pro DC and can be enabled by using the Recognise Text feature in the Enhance Scans tool tab. There are also free browser extensions such as CopyFish that you can use if you don’t want to download documents.

An additional feature of OCR is that it allows you to reflow text. This means that when you make text bigger, it will change to fit the screen at its larger size, removing the need for annoying (and inaccessible) sideways scrolling. Adobe’s guide to reflowing text in a PDF has instructions.

Text in a PDF document
A PDF document magnified, before and after reflowing (UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities)

Practice

You can practice some of these accessibility changes with a PDF document.

Download the chapter on PDF Accessibility (UQ log-in required) from the book Web Accessibility: Web Standards and Regulatory Compliance and open it with Adobe Acrobat Pro.

Use the instructions in the chapter to change the colour contrast, reflow the text, and read the content aloud.

Would any of these accessibility features be useful to you?


Presentations

Sometimes your assignments might involve giving a presentation or creating a video. Presentations are in some ways easier to make accessible because they often contain content in multiple formats. For example, you may give a verbal presentation while also providing PowerPoint slides for your audience to read.

Here are some quick tips to make your presentations more accessible:

  • Include notes that you intend to read from in the notes field of your presentation slides – if people can’t attend your presentation or have a hearing impairment, this allows them to follow the content more easily.
  • Use simple language in your slides and presentations – you’ll get your message across more clearly and have the added bonus of removing accessibility barriers for people with cognitive impairments or different levels of language skills.
  • Record presentations if possible – recordings allow people to go back and catch up on things they may have missed and removes the physical accessibility barriers to people who are unable to attend your presentation in person.
  • Include a transcript or closed captions for any video content – these features make videos accessible to a much wider range of people.

WAI’s guide on creating accessible presentations has more tips.


Accessibility checker tools

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Accessibility Copyright © 2023 by The University of Queensland is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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