Comments on: #WeekendWatch: Accessibility in Word https://3764s18.tracigardner.com/weekendwatch-accessibility-in-word/ English 3764 @ Virginia Tech, Spring 2018 Wed, 21 Feb 2018 04:03:29 +0000 hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.2 By: Youngsu Kim https://3764s18.tracigardner.com/weekendwatch-accessibility-in-word/#comment-1834 Fri, 23 Feb 2018 21:20:06 +0000 https://3764s18.tracigardner.com/?p=4247#comment-1834 I think I’ve used the Word quite a lot so far, but I never knew that the Word has the accessibility checker. It’s definitely one that I would take a look at and refer to when I think I’m done with the analysis assignment. It will possibly help me improve the accessibility of my document.

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By: Mackenzie Knox https://3764s18.tracigardner.com/weekendwatch-accessibility-in-word/#comment-1773 Wed, 21 Feb 2018 04:03:29 +0000 https://3764s18.tracigardner.com/?p=4247#comment-1773 The accessibility mentioned here targets people with different abilities than our own (as far as I understand it). Screen readers are generally used by those who may not have the ability to read the information themselves, whether it is due to differences in vision capabilities or something else. It is important to be considerate and aware of these differences, as your audience will greatly appreciate it. I have noticed throughout this course the effort put into to make it accessible to everyone and I truly appreciate and will strive to make my own work as accessible.

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By: tengrrl https://3764s18.tracigardner.com/weekendwatch-accessibility-in-word/#comment-1753 Mon, 19 Feb 2018 04:35:55 +0000 https://3764s18.tracigardner.com/?p=4247#comment-1753 I’d argue that those are features of good persuasive writing (and much writing in general). No matter what you write, you still need to make it easy to use, clear, and accessible to all your readers.

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By: Cassie Bienert https://3764s18.tracigardner.com/weekendwatch-accessibility-in-word/#comment-1747 Sun, 18 Feb 2018 20:01:57 +0000 https://3764s18.tracigardner.com/?p=4247#comment-1747 This video makes it seem like we are trying to advertise our writing to customers. Its focused on “accessibility,” convenience, appearance, etc. which are all targets of successful advertising. This goes back to our professional bio project when we are essentially trying to sell ourselves to our readers. Our writing is a reflection of ourselves and we want to appear accessible and organized.

I was a little confused about the purpose of this video though. Is it meant for documents that are opened on a computer to then be edited and clicked on to different links? Or is it just meant to make a document look better?

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By: Mariel Jastrebsky https://3764s18.tracigardner.com/weekendwatch-accessibility-in-word/#comment-1746 Sun, 18 Feb 2018 17:53:12 +0000 https://3764s18.tracigardner.com/?p=4247#comment-1746 I agree with Danielle and Josh because I’ve never seen the Accessibility Checker for Microsoft Word. I think that it allows the writer a chance to edit their own work before people peer review it. There are also things that you don’t even consider that make the paper better such as not having image watermarks and using hyperlinks instead of a long link that takes up too much space. The nice thing too is that as the writer you don’t even need to pay that much attention to it because of the Accessibility Checker which can do all of that for the writers. With so many advancements in technology I feel like Word will only continue to expand on being able to help writers improve not only the layout of the page, but the structure of sentences and give suggestions on better wording to use.

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By: Josh Detwiler https://3764s18.tracigardner.com/weekendwatch-accessibility-in-word/#comment-1744 Sun, 18 Feb 2018 08:18:15 +0000 https://3764s18.tracigardner.com/?p=4247#comment-1744 Same. I’ve used Word’s backwards compatibility features to go between .doc and .docx, but I haven’t ever paid attention to accessibility. It makes sense though; accessibility features tend to destroy stylizations, so there’s different things that will better tag and mark page elements to prevent that from happening. I do appreciate that Word has an automated tool for identifying those things without imposing changes by itself.

I noticed that they pointed out “errors” for accessibility, and one of these I think would be color blindness. One of the most common forms of color blindness can make table color schemes very hard to differentiate (I think it’s reds and greens that are indistinguishable). I think it’s amazing that Word would point something like that out to you.

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By: Danielle Lehman https://3764s18.tracigardner.com/weekendwatch-accessibility-in-word/#comment-1742 Sat, 17 Feb 2018 20:23:03 +0000 https://3764s18.tracigardner.com/?p=4247#comment-1742 I never knew that Word had an accessibility checker. I have used Microsoft Word for years, yet I never knew this was an option. I found this video very informative about how the accessibility checker works. It is helpful because this checker will give you some tips, errors, or some issues. This can really come in handy when you have a super long report for some class that you need to check over for any issues. From the Lynda video about making text more accessible, I learned how to modify a style of text from a window that will pop up. These video will be really helpful with the table we are all creating and also future reports for this class or other classes.

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