PDF Accessibility
PDFs are a great format to share content with students. However, it is highly recommended to share to database articles instead of PDFs. Contact your for assistance.
See below for best practices when working with PDFs to make sure they are accessible.
Scanned PDFs
- Why Scanned PDFs are NOT Accessible
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- Scanned PDFs are image files, so they are not readable by screen reader software. Therefore, students who are blind or have low vision and use screen readers cannot access the content. Some examples of screen reader software are NVDA, JAWS, Apple VoiceOver or ChromeVox. They read the content aloud to the user.
- With scanned PDFs, students cannot use digital tools such as highlighting, searching or copying and pasting.
- Poorly scanned PDFs are difficult to read because the text is often grainy or blurred or there are black margins. Most students have trouble reading the content and might get overwhelmed, frustrated or distracted.
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- How to Fix a Scanned PDF
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Option 1: (Best option!) Locate the original file online or work with your to locate an accessible version. If nothing is available, proceed to option 2.
Option 2: Use Ally鈥檚 alternative formats to convert the document. This option is not perfect and usually requires some remediation.
- Open the document and select alternative formats at the top of the screen.
- It is recommended to download both the OCRed PDF and HTML alternative formats to compare
the visual quality (text clarity and accuracy) and accessibility.
Note: OCR stands for Optical Character Recognition and means the document鈥檚 content is readable by screen readers, selectable and searchable. - Do a visual check of both alternative formats. Is all the text visible? Are there only minor edits to make?
- After the visual check, use Ally to check their accessibility. First, copy and paste
the HTML version into a Canvas page. Then upload the OCRed PDF into Canvas. Ally will
provide accessibility scores for them.
To check the accessibility of a PDF, click on the gear icon next to the document鈥檚 title. It may take a minute to generate and you may need to refresh the page.
To check the accessibility of a Canvas page, open the page and select edit. The gear icon will show at the top right of the screen. - Fix any remaining accessibility issues. If there are still many issues, consider going back to option 1 and locating an accessible document or webpage with similar content. Consider using a slightly different document if it's accessible without converting or editing. This could save you a lot of time.
- Open the document and select alternative formats at the top of the screen.
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- How to use Adobe Acrobat DC to scan/OCR your PDF
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You can also use Adobe Acrobat DC to 鈥淪can/OCR鈥 and 鈥淓nhance鈥 your document. The result will be similar to Ally鈥檚 OCRed alternative format and usually requires some remediation.
- Open Adobe Acrobat DC. Select "Scan & OCR" from the right hand menu. If it鈥檚 not there, select the more tools tab, locate "Scan & OCR" and select open.
- Select "Enhance" at the top middle of the screen.
- Select "Scanned Document".
- Select "Enhance".
- Upload the OCRed PDF into Canvas and check Ally's accessibility score. You may still need to edit the document for accessibility.
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Untagged PDFs
Tags are essentially markers that provide structure to a PDF. Without tags, students using screen readers won鈥檛 be able to accurately navigate through the document because there will be no logical reading order.
- How to Fix an Untagged PDF
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Use Microsoft Word to Tag the Document.
- Open the PDF and save it as a Word document.
- Upload the Word document into Canvas so Ally can check its accessibility. Be sure
to select the all issues button in Ally's Instructor Feedback panel. In addition to
being untagged, the document could be missing a title or some images might be missing
ALT text. It saves you time to fix all the issues at once.
- Edit the Word document to fix all the issues (besides tagging). To tag the document see the next step.
- Select 鈥淪ave as Adobe PDF鈥.
- Select the Options button.
- Ensure the checkbox next to 鈥淓nable Accessibility and Reflow with tagged Adobe PDF鈥
is checked. Reflow refers to content adjustability on various screen sizes.
- Save the tagged PDF and upload it to your course to check its accessibility. There may still be issues you鈥檒l have to correct. This method is only a first step.
- Open the PDF and save it as a Word document.
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- Can I manually tag PDFs in Adobe Acrobat DC?
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Manually tagging PDFs using Adobe Acrobat DC is not recommended because it has a very high learning curve and is best done by experts in Adobe Acrobat DC.
If interested, see . Note: You must be logged in to view this course.
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Converting PowerPoints to PDFs
Step 1: Ensure the PowerPoint is accessible.
For more detail, see .
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Color Contrast
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Always use high contrast templates which use dark colored fonts on light backgrounds or vice versa.
Some high contrast templates are: Gallery, Retrospect, Savon and Dividend.
You can always check the color contrast using .
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- Font Size
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Use font size 24pt or above.
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- Slide Layouts
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Use the built-in slide layouts, not text boxes. If you use textboxes, you鈥檒l need to manually set your reading order which is quite time consuming.
For more details, see .
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- Unique Slide Titles
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Use unique titles for each slide. For example, two slides about study skills could be named 鈥淪tudy Skills Part 1鈥 and 鈥淪tudy Skills Part 2鈥.
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- Add Alternative Text (ALT Text) for all Images
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To set the ALT text, select the image and right click or select the 鈥淔ormat鈥 tab in the top menu.
Then select 鈥渆dit ALT text鈥.
Type a brief description of the image in the box. Imagine you are describing it to someone who is blind.
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- ALT Text for Complex Images
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For complex images, write a caption explaining the content and mark the image as 鈥渄ecorative鈥.
If the image is too complex for a caption, include a link to accessible web content, like an article or webpage, or descriptive text-based Google Document.
Then mark the image as 鈥渄ecorative.鈥
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- Hyperlinks
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Descriptive hyperlinks provide key information for students; they can easily understand where the link takes them. This is essential for students using screen readers.
- Type the title of the webpage, article, or resource then highlight it and select the
link icon in the Insert tab.
- Paste the link and click ok.
Please remember:
- Do not just paste the URL on your slides.
- Do not link the words 鈥渃lick here鈥 or 鈥渉ere鈥 as they are not descriptive enough.
- Type the title of the webpage, article, or resource then highlight it and select the
link icon in the Insert tab.
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Step 2: Run PowerPoint's Accessibility Checker.
- Run the PowerPoint Accessibility Checker
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Select the 鈥渞eview鈥 tab and select 鈥渃heck accessibility鈥.
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- Review the Errors and Warnings
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Review the errors and warnings in the Accessibility Checker panel that automatically opens on the right.
Make any necessary modifications.
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Step 3: Convert the PowerPoint to PDF and check its accessibility.
- Use the "Save as Adobe PDF" Button
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- Select 鈥淔ile鈥 and 鈥淪ave as Adobe PDF鈥.
- Select 鈥淥ptions鈥 and check the box next to 鈥淓nable accessibility and reflow with Adobe
tagged PDF鈥. It should be enabled by default, but it鈥檚 useful to check.
- Then select 鈥淪ave鈥.
- Select 鈥淔ile鈥 and 鈥淪ave as Adobe PDF鈥.
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- Run the PDF Accessibility Checker
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To ensure the conversion was successful:
- Open the PDF in Adobe Acrobat DC.
- Select the accessibility checker which is represented by a purple person icon in a
purple circle. If you don鈥檛 see it in your toolbar, select the tool icon, locate
it, and add it to your tools.
- Select 鈥渁ccessibility check鈥 in the side panel.
- View the results and make any modifications as needed.
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