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ID&D KB How-to Guide

Working together to enhance teaching & learning. If you need additional assistance, please reach out to the ID&D team.

Accessibility is an important part of course design as it focuses on providing equity in access to materials and information, and especially to ensure that people using assistive technology can complete crucial tasks.

DesignPLUS offers several tools to help with making content more accessible for students. The tools include the Contrast Checker, Headings Checker, Image Alt Checker, Link Checker, Math Checker, and the Table Checker tool. Each of these checkers and tools have easy ways to quickly adjust your content to make it more accessible, creating a much more user-friendly learning experience for all your learner types.

View this tutorial video to explore the capabilities of the accessibility tools offered in DesignPLUS.

This article provides step-by-step instructions on how to use the most frequently used accessibility tools in the DesignPLUS Sidebar (scroll down or click on the link to view a specific section):

Tip!

You can click on the images in this article to see them larger and with more detail.

Accessing the Accessibility and Usability Tools

  1. To access the Accessibility tool in DesignPLUS

    1. Click on the Accessibility icon at the top of the Sidebar

    2. If you have issues on your page you will see an error indicator in the icon

    3. Where errors occur, the tool to correct it will have an error indicator

    4. Click on the tool where errors occur

      access icon.png

Contrast Checker Tool

The Contrast Checker tool will check the color contrast of any text on the page. If the font color is too light it will present a problem for viewing with a screen reader due to the lack of contrast.

 Step-by-Step...
  1. If you see an error indicator for the Contrast Checker tool, click on the icon to open the tool.

    contrast 1.png

  2. When the tool opens:

    1. At the top you will be provided some guidelines on the contrast ratios that make content viewable

    2. The error that is present will be displayed under the tab marked with a red exclamation point

    3. You will be shown where the color contrast that is affecting viewability (Here it is affecting both large and normal size text sizes)

    4. Looking at the page, you can see that the yellow font color selected for the list is not viewable for most people

      contrast 2.png

  3. Adjust the color of the text using the slidebar under the ratio boxes,

    1. Slide the button to the left to increase contrast

    2. As you adjust the color, the ratio will change

    3. When the ratio is acceptable the text error box will change to green

      contrast 3.png

  4. When the contrast ratio is acceptable for both Normal and Large text, the Apply button will appear.

    contrast 4.png

  5. Click the Apply button (a check will appear) and the text in your page will be corrected.

    contrast 5.png


Heading Checker Tool

Headings are meant to be a hierarchical outline of the content on your page. For Screen reader users, ensuring that your headings help group content in this manner is critical. However, we often select a heading style for its appearance rather than its hierarchical position, which causes problems for accessibility.

 Step-by-Step...
  1. If you see an error indication for the Heading Checker tool, click on the icon to open the tool.

    heading1.png

  2. When the tool opens,

    1. You will see a listing of the headings in the order they appear, and an indicator of their level.

    2. Headings that are not in the right hierarchical order or position will be identified in red.

      heading2.png

  3. Click the appropriate arrow in front of the heading to move it higher or lower in order.

    heading3.png

  4. The heading and the style applied to that level of heading will be corrected and be identified in the tool.

    heading4.png


Image Alt-Text Checker Tool

In pages where images are used, it is important to provide descriptive information about what the image presents for those who use screen readers. While you may not get any red flags on a page that uses images, it is still a good practice to use this tool to ensure that the page is accessible.

 Step-by-Step...
  1. Click on the Image Alt-Text Checker tool un the Accessibility tools, even if no error flag appears.

    imagealt 1.png

  2. When the tool opens,

    1. At the top you will be provided a short explanation of what Alt-Text is used for

    2. The images that appear on your page will be displayed in a column under the guidance

    3. For each image a warning message will appear if you have either not provided alt-text or marked the image as decorative

    4. If you have entered a file name as the alt-text, the tool will remind you that this is not a good practice

      imagealt 2.png

  3. To correct this issue, enter the appropriate selection:

    1. If the image is purely decorative, you can check the tick box on the upper right side

    2. If the image is something relevant to the content on the page, enter a description in the Alt-Text box

      imagealt 3.png

  4. When you have made your entries, the error message will disappear, and the page will be ready for a screen reader to interpret the images for a student.

Tip!

Avoid using the phrase “An image of” in your alt-text description.

Do not use the file name in the alt-text.



Visit the DesignPLUS Training Series Tutorials for more videos. For more step-by-step guides, visit the DesignPLUS User Guide. (These links will overwrite this page.)


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