Creating Accessible Digital Content
Digital accessibility is designing digital products and services so they can be used by everyone, including individuals with disabilities. By making content accessible, you benefit all users. Below are step-by-step tutorials that will help you through creating accessible documents, presentations, multimedia, and more.
Tutorials and Guides
Accessibility Tips by Role
For Faculty
To ensure that all digital course content complies with the new Title II rule, Geneseo announced the Strive for 85 campaign. All Brightspace courses must have an Ally accessibility score of 85% or above to be accessible to students, which you can achieve by following these steps:
Use Ally in Brightspace to check your course's accessibility score. To locate the Ally Course Report, click "Course Tools" in the blue navigation bar at the top of your screen and click "Ally Course Report."
Make documents accessible from the start using Word or PowerPoint, and pass the built-in accessibility checker before sharing. Avoid uploading PDFs as they take time to make accessible.
Have scanned pages of readings, or notes containing math equations? Send them to CIT for remediation or recreate them in Word.
Have journal articles? Link to the article source instead of uploading the PDF. For books, request accessible versions from Milne Library.
Schedule a consultation with Digital Accessibility Analyst, Anjali Shiyamsaran.
For Staff
Avoid sharing documents in PDF format as PDFs are labor-intensive to make accessible.
For Students
More Accessibility Resources
Join the SUNY Inclusion Quest (open to everyone on campus) for more accessibility training.
Find tutorials and tips on CIT's self-help pages
Visit the Milne Library's Assistive Technology and Accessibility Workstations
Deque University Accessibility Courses (free to SUNY students, faculty, staff)
Convert documents to accessible formats using SensusAccess
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