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I would love to hear from the group: What are your favorite tools for ensuring accessible content?
Please share by replying below. 😊
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Part of our university (UPenn) uses PopeTech while the business school (Wharton) uses UDOIT Advantage from Cidi Labs to identify some issues. We build on the great list of tools/resources @mtuten noted. Also, we use external vendors to address some content.
But even the best tools, don't pick up everything. As @sbj mentioned, educating our internal users that accessibility is everyone's responsibility and best practices is key. Some of this is formal training opportunities, while others occur 1:1 with faculty addressing specific use-of-non-best-practices. When evaluating new technology, it's VPAT provision & WCAG level discussion is a must.
Great question @emilyk23!
Val King, the ID
Sr. ID Project Leader, The Wharton School at UPenn
I've found Anthology Ally to be incredibly helpful. It's not a standalone tool, but rather integrates directly into Canvas.
Here's what I like about it:
It really streamlines the process of making course content more inclusive.
So many great recommendations and resources! Thank you @Maeve_McCooey @valentinesking @szw151 @mtuten @sbj !
Tools That Support ADA Compliance in Online Courses
Ensuring ADA compliance in online learning is a shared responsibility, and having the right tools makes a big difference. Here are six tools that have made a direct impact in my workflow:
Adobe Acrobat – Essential for formatting accessible PDFs. Tagging headings, adding alt text, and setting the correct reading order ensures screen reader compatibility.
Vivo Video Captioning – Delivers accurate, time-synced captions for instructional videos, supporting students who are deaf or hard of hearing and enhancing overall comprehension.
Ally (Canvas LTI) – Identifies accessibility issues directly within Canvas and offers alternative formats. It provides real-time guidance to help maintain compliant content.
Microsoft Word – A foundational tool. Proper use of headers, alt text, and accessible table formatting helps ensure documents meet accessibility standards before sharing or exporting.
ChatGPT – Useful for reformatting instructional content, improving clarity, and enhancing consistency, supporting cognitive accessibility and helping reduce content barriers.
Adobe Photoshop – Helpful for quickly editing or enhancing images to meet accessibility needs, such as improving contrast or preparing visuals for alt text inclusion.
Each of these tools plays a role in building inclusive, accessible learning environments.
Hi Emily,
I am an accessibility coordinator in our online education department. With 10 years of experience, I probably rely more on testing with a screen reader or on reading the HTML than using tools. But, these are the tools I like:
Our institution also uses Yuja Panorama in Canvas. It is a good tool, but the projects I have had since its acquisition have not lent themselves to me using it often (except, perhaps the analytics side).
Checking how the content looks from the Canvas mobile apps is also important.
Wow 😍 this is incredible info - thank you for sharing the links and details @mtuten! I'm going to be bookmarking this for my own knowledge and homework. We appreciate your willingness to share your expertise and resources!
Thank you so much for sharing this list. It is so helpful!
That's a terrific list @mtuten has shared. Our campus uses Ally to check and remediate content in Canvas, and I'm pretty happy with that tool. We previously used UDOIT, which has undergone some great updates and is also an awesome choice for checking and guiding instructors and designers to make accessible content.
The only thing I would add, is that it is very important to educate ourselves and the users we work with on the how's and why's of accessible digital content: why it matters. A great starting point is the WC3 video Introduction to Web Accessibility (4:07)
A lot of the accessibility checkers use AI, and it is important to understand that there are often false positives and false negatives with any of these checkers.
@sbj I appreciate the call out to be cautious and review the findings of AI-generated checkers. And thanks for the video! 🙂
Thanks for that great list of tools and resources. I want to share a Penn State resource to help people create beautiful content in Canvas: the Canvas Styles resource - all styles have been vetted for accessibility and responsive design and we provide guidance for use of the styles to ensure they stay accessible.
I love this resource! Though there are a few things they recommend that I would do differently.
First, any time that you use a <details><summary> accordion, be sure to add "style="cursor: pointer;" to the summary attribute so that the mouse cursor changes to the pointing hand when hovering on the item to further emphasize that it is clickable.
Second, I don't use the code they suggest for creating columns--or, more accurately, "Row of Resizeable Images." My experiences so far with flex grids is that they don't create what I believe to be an ideal mobile experience. Admittedly, I learned bootstrap grid first, so I may be biased.
I think we do use the cursor pointer style in some places, but not all - that's great feedback! Regarding the flex-grid code, when I look at our current pages, the any grouped items: images, tables, or boxes, all display in a verticle column on a mobile device, which is what we wanted. But if you have a better approach, I would be very interested in learning more.
Part of our university (UPenn) uses PopeTech while the business school (Wharton) uses UDOIT Advantage from Cidi Labs to identify some issues. We build on the great list of tools/resources @mtuten noted. Also, we use external vendors to address some content.
But even the best tools, don't pick up everything. As @sbj mentioned, educating our internal users that accessibility is everyone's responsibility and best practices is key. Some of this is formal training opportunities, while others occur 1:1 with faculty addressing specific use-of-non-best-practices. When evaluating new technology, it's VPAT provision & WCAG level discussion is a must.
Great question @emilyk23!
Val King, the ID
Sr. ID Project Leader, The Wharton School at UPenn
CidiLabs/UDOIT is another great partner solution!
Agreed, more generalized knowledge about web accessibility is a key component.
If any institutions need a starting place, @EvaSnider from Ball State shared this blog post about their self-paced faculty training course that is also shared on the Commons.
I've found Anthology Ally to be incredibly helpful. It's not a standalone tool, but rather integrates directly into Canvas.
Here's what I like about it:
It really streamlines the process of making course content more inclusive.
So many great recommendations and resources! Thank you @Maeve_McCooey @valentinesking @szw151 @mtuten @sbj !
Tools That Support ADA Compliance in Online Courses
Ensuring ADA compliance in online learning is a shared responsibility, and having the right tools makes a big difference. Here are six tools that have made a direct impact in my workflow:
Adobe Acrobat – Essential for formatting accessible PDFs. Tagging headings, adding alt text, and setting the correct reading order ensures screen reader compatibility.
Vivo Video Captioning – Delivers accurate, time-synced captions for instructional videos, supporting students who are deaf or hard of hearing and enhancing overall comprehension.
Ally (Canvas LTI) – Identifies accessibility issues directly within Canvas and offers alternative formats. It provides real-time guidance to help maintain compliant content.
Microsoft Word – A foundational tool. Proper use of headers, alt text, and accessible table formatting helps ensure documents meet accessibility standards before sharing or exporting.
ChatGPT – Useful for reformatting instructional content, improving clarity, and enhancing consistency, supporting cognitive accessibility and helping reduce content barriers.
Adobe Photoshop – Helpful for quickly editing or enhancing images to meet accessibility needs, such as improving contrast or preparing visuals for alt text inclusion.
Each of these tools plays a role in building inclusive, accessible learning environments.
This is a great list! We are looking into equation accessibility. Is anyone using any Wiris products- Wiris Quizzes, MathType and/or ChemType? If so, your feedback is greatly appreciated! It would also be great to hear other approaches to equation accessibility, especially multi-line text.
@JenniferLash We currently do not have a tool, but while we were getting a demo of Read and Write, they do have a math product (maybe called Equatio) that might be worth looking into. Good luck!
We use Equatio. I recommend it. Not sure what your use case is. Equatio helps content creators make accessible web pages and documents and provides tools and options for students who are authoring math.
A lot of the tools I've used are listed above, but I did not see the ASU alt text generator mentioned! Its an awesome tool, especially for those new to writing alt-text. I find their alt text often better than ChatGPT or Copilot.
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