Video Accessibility

For a variety of disciplines, video content can be a great way to help convey ideas to learners. Videovmay also appeal to individual learning preferences. Although multimedia content is a common learning component, it is not as accessible as ordinary text-based content due to restraints for people with visual and hearing impairments, people who are not native English speakers, and people with internet bandwidth constraints.

Best Practices

When creating video content, ensure everyone can watch and understand. Plan for accessibility from the start because it requires more time and effort to fix things later.

Here are some better practices to make your videos more accessible:

  1. Write a script with audio descriptions of what is happening visually in the video.
  2. Use a microphone or headset to record your voice.
  3. Think about how light and the background will look in the video.
  4. Make sure the information in the video has sufficient colour contrast and avoid flashing content.
  5. Order machine-generated captions and edit for accuracy using your script.
  6. Use edited captions to generate a transcript.
  7. Upload the video to an accessible video platform.

To learn more about each best practice listed above, review the following:

Integrated Description
Plain Language
Audio Recording
Webcam
Screen Recording
Colour
Avoid Flashing Content
Video Players
Captions
Transcripts

Two approaches from the above stand out for making audio and video content more accessible.

Captions

Create accurate captions for multimedia content. Timed text captions are essential to conveying spoken words and sounds in videos that include audio. Students with hearing impairments and those whose native language is not English will greatly benefit from captioned video.

Transcripts

Create detailed transcripts for multimedia content. Similar to captions, transcripts convey the spoken words and sounds found in audio, although a transcript includes all audio content written out in paragraphs rather than timed to a video. Transcripts can be offered for either video content with audio or for audio-only content (e.g., podcasts).

When sharing a transcript for multimedia content, include additional details to make it easier to read, such as headings to break up the content.


The section on best practices has been adapted from the following:

Video Accessibility” in  Accessibility Handbook for Teaching and Learning by Briana Fraser and Luke McKnight is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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Fanshawe OER Training Guide Copyright © 2024 by Fanshawe College is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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