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How to Create Accessible PowerPoint Presentations Elizabeth Tu and Thayer Watkins April, 2010
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Agenda What is an accessible PowerPoint presentation? How to create accessible slide presentations? The S.L.I.C. elements Printing Listening to a slide presentation Resources 2 Center for Faculty Development and Support
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What is an Accessible Slide Presentation? A digital slide presentation that can be read by screen reader software for users with disabilities 3 Center for Faculty Development and Support
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What is an Accessible Slide Presentation? The SLIC Elements S tructure - via Outline pane and Slide Layouts Li nks – with meaningful website name, hyperlink, and url I mages, graphics, or any non-text information – with descriptive alternative text or caption C hart or table: created within PowerPoint or include source file 4 Center for Faculty Development and Support
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INSTRUCTIONS ON CREATING ACCESSIBLE SLIDE PRESENTATIONS 5 Center for Faculty Development and Support
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Structure Why is it important to have a structure for my slide presentation? A: Screen reader software can provide a listing of heading styles for users with disabilities to navigate quickly to any parts of the document. See a sample of the Heading list generated by JAWS below. 6 Center for Faculty Development and Support
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Structure (continued) There are two ways to ensure your slide presentations have structure in MS PowerPoint 2007 for windows: A.Using the Slide Layouts B.Viewing the Outline pane Instructions follow next. 7 Center for Faculty Development and Support
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Structure (continued) A.Slide Layouts in MS PowerPoint 2007 1.On Home tab, in Slides group, click the down arrow in the lower right corner of the New Slide icon. 2.Select title slide or any appropriate layout to start building your slide presentation. NOTE: Slide layouts help define the sequence of titles, subtitles, content texts, and objects in the entire slide presentation. 8 Center for Faculty Development and Support
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Structure (continued) B. Outline Pane in MS Word PowerPoint 2007 1.Click Outline tab in the Slide and Outline area. Only text displayed on the outline pane will be read by screen reader software. NOTE: Make sure each slide has a slide title. The slide title serves as the structure in navigating and understanding the logical flow of the slide presentation. 9 Center for Faculty Development and Support
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Links If there are any web links in your slides, make sure to include the following information A meaningful name for the website The URL web address Hyperlink the name of the website 10 Center for Faculty Development and Support
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Links (continued) Instructions on how to create hyperlinks for your documents in MS PowerPoint 2007: 1.Highlight the text you want to hyperlink. 2.Right click the highlighted text and select Hyperlink in the pop-up box. 11 Center for Faculty Development and Support
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Links (continued) 3.In the Insert Hyperlink window, enter the URL in the Address box at the bottom. 4.Click OK. 12 Center for Faculty Development and Support
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Links (continued) Sample of a hyperlinked website name with URL displayed Note: The more relevant links included in your document and the more links pointing to your website, the more traffic you will have for your page. 13 Center for Faculty Development and Support
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Links (continued) Why do I need to hyperlink the name of the website? A: Screen reader software such as, JAWS, can provide a list of hyperlinks for users with disabilities. It is more meaningful to read the name of the website than the long URL or “click here.” See a sample of the Links list generated by JAWS below. 14 Center for Faculty Development and Support
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Images If there are images, graphics, or any non-text information in your presentation, make sure to include descriptive alternative texts or captions. 1.Right-click on the image and select Size and Position toward the bottom. 15 Center for Faculty Development and Support
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Images (continued) 2.In the Size and Position window, click the Alt Text tab. 3.Enter descriptive information in the Alternative text box. 4.Click Close. 16 Center for Faculty Development and Support
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Images (continued) Q: Sometimes I may use several images to illustrate the same key point on one slide. Do I have to add alternative texts for each one of the images? A: No, since you are trying to convey the same content or message with several images, you can group all images into one big image then add alt text or caption for this one grouped image. 17 Center for Faculty Development and Support
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Images (continued) 5.Hold down Shift key and click on each images 6.Right click the grouped image and select Group under Group in the pop-up box. 7.Repeat steps 1 and 2 to add alternative text for this grouped image. 18 Center for Faculty Development and Support
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Charts or Tables Q: What do I need to do if I include Charts or Tables in my slide presentation? A: a)For simple tables or charts, create them within the built-in PowerPoint slide layout. They can be read more easily by a text reader than those imported from Word or Excel. b)You can also import the data from Word or Excel and attach the source document. 19 Center for Faculty Development and Support
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Charts or Tables (continued) For simple tables or charts, click on either the table or chart icon on your slide layout to build your slide content. 20 Center for Faculty Development and Support
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Charts or Tables (continued) Center for Faculty Development and Support 21 To import the tabular data from Word, –Click on the table icon, decide the appropriate columns and rows, copy your table from the source document and paste it into the slide presentation.
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Charts (continued) To import the chart from source document into the slide presentation, 1.Click on the Chart icon on the slide layout. 2.From the Insert Chart window, select your desirable chart type. 22 Center for Faculty Development and Support
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Charts (continued) 3.Double click on your selected chart. A new Excel spreadsheet will open with a sample staging data and a sample staging chart on the PowerPoint slide side by side. 23 Center for Faculty Development and Support
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Charts (continued) 4.Copy the source data from your original Excel spreadsheet and paste them onto the new Excel spreadsheet. Follow instructions to resize chart data range if necessary to reflect your source data correctly. NOTE: Screen reader software cannot read the context information for tables or charts. Use Notes pane to explain the information in the chart and table. Reference and attach this notes page as a separate document to the slide presentation. Center for Faculty Development and Support 24
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Charts (continued) If you use Notes pane to explain your charts, tables complex images, or audio files, here is how to save your notes page as a separate document. 5.Select Publish from Office button drop down menu. 6.Select Create Handouts in Microsoft Office Word in the pop-up box. Center for Faculty Development and Support 25
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Charts (continued) 7.In the Send to Microsoft Office Word window select your desirable page layout in Microsoft Office Word by clicking the appropriate radio button such as Notes next to slides. 8.Click OK to save your Notes as a separate Word file. Attach this separate Notes document to your slide presentation. Center for Faculty Development and Support 26
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A Pop Quiz What does S.L.I.C. stand for? Do you now know how to tell whether your slide presentation is accessible? Center for Faculty Development and Support 27
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Printing There are several options to print your slides. Select Print under Office button In the Print window, next to the Print What drop down box, click the down arrow to select your desirable options such as, Slides, Handouts, Notes pages, or Outline View. Click OK. Center for Faculty Development and Support 28
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Printing (continued) More options are available if you select Handouts. Click the drop down arrow to select 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, or 9 in the Slides per page. A preview of your selected 3 slides per page is shown at the right. Center for Faculty Development and Support 29
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Listening to Your Slides You can listen to the slides to test whether your presentation is readable. 1.Under Office Button, select Save As and Adobe PDF. Center for Faculty Development and Support 30
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Listening to Your Slides (continued) 2.In the Save As window, enter a file name. 3.In the Save as type drop down box, ensure PDF files is selected and click Save. Center for Faculty Development and Support 31
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Listening to Your Slides (continued) 4.Go to the PDF version of your slides. 5.Under the View menu, select Read Out Loud to activate it. 6.Go back to View menu and select Read this page only or Read to End of Document. Your slides will be read to you. Center for Faculty Development and Support 32
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Summary Reaching out to as many people as you can… 33 Center for Faculty Development and Support
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Resources Online Resources Eric Meyer S5 slide show conversion tool at http://meyerweb.com/eric/tools/s5/ Eric Meyer S5 slide show conversion tool Convert PowerPoint to HTML by using Web Publishing Wizard at http://virtual508.com/Web Publishing Wizard Lecshare is another tool to convert PowerPoint to HTML page. Visit Lecshare website at http://virtual508.com/ for more information.Lecshare website Center for Faculty Development and Support 34
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Resources (continued) California State University (CSU) Online Resources CSU Accessibility Technology Initiative at http://calstate.edu/accessibility/ CSU Accessibility Technology Initiative Professional Development for Accessibility Technology at http://teachingcommons.cdl.edu/access/ Professional Development for Accessibility Technology San Jose State University Online Resources Center for Faculty Development at http://www.sjsu.edu/cfd/accessibility/ Center for Faculty Development Center for Faculty Development and Support 35
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