![]() It’s better to have more slides than trying to place too much text on one slide. If you will be using your own laptop, make sure the classroom is equipped with the proper cables, drivers, and other means to display your presentation the way you have intended.Think about message interpretation for PowerPoint use online: will students be able to understand material in a PowerPoint presentation outside of the classroom? Will you need to provide notes and/or other material to help students understand complex information, data, or graphics?.This also models proper citation for your students. This is especially important when using visuals obtained from the internet or other sources. Be aware of copyright law when displaying course materials, and properly cite source material.Consider time and effort in preparing a PowerPoint presentation give yourself plenty of lead time for design and development.Save your PowerPoint presentation as a PDF file to distribute to students with visual impairments.You could also send your file to the Disability Resource Center to have them assess its accessibility (send it far in advance of when you will need to use it). Use the feedback to improve your PowerPoint’s accessibility. ![]() Use Microsoft’s Accessibility Checker to identify potential accessibility issues in your completed PowerPoint.Check that your reading order is correct by using the Selection Pane (organized bottom-up). The order that text appears on the slide may not be the reading order of the text. Set a reading order for text on your slides.Screen readers may have difficulty providing information about the table if there are too many columns and rows, and they may “think” the table is complete if they come to a blank cell. If you use tables on your slides, ensure they are not overly complex and do not include blank cells. Transcripts can also be useful as an additional resource, but captioning ensures students can follow along with what is on the screen in real-time. ![]() All video and audio content should be captioned for students with hearing impairments.Alt text should describe the visual or table in detail so that students with visual impairments can “read” the images with their screen readers. All visuals and tables should include alt text.Since screen readers read what is on the page, you may want to consider creating a hyperlink using a descriptive title instead of displaying the URL. ![]()
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