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Overview & Resources

Black Hawk College is committed to ensuring our digital content is accessible to everyone, including individuals who use assistive technologies such as screen readers, keyboard navigation, or captions.

As part of this commitment—and in preparation for the April 2026 accessibility compliance deadline—all public-facing digital content must meet established accessibility standards before being published on the college website or shared through official channels.

This page provides a high-level overview of what “accessible content” means, why it matters, and where to find guidance for creating compliant materials.

Digital accessibility at Black Hawk College is a shared responsibility. Ensuring that digital content is accessible requires coordination across the college, with each unit and content owner playing an active role.

Why Accessibility Matters

Accessible digital content ensures that all members of our campus community can independently access information, services, and learning materials.

Accessibility supports:

  • Individuals who are blind or have low vision.
  • Individuals who are deaf or hard of hearing.
  • Individuals with cognitive or learning disabilities.
  • Individuals who rely on keyboard navigation or assistive software.

Inaccessible content—such as images with embedded text, scanned PDFs, or uncaptioned videos—can prevent users from accessing critical information.

Accessibility is not only a legal requirement; it is part of Black Hawk College’s commitment to student success.

Accessibility FAQ

What does “making content accessible” mean?

At a basic level, accessible digital content means information can be:

  • Read by screen readers.
  • Navigated using a keyboard.
  • Viewed with sufficient color contrast.
  • Understood without relying solely on images or visual layout.

Accessibility applies to:

  • Website pages
  • PDF documents and downloadable files
  • Email content
  • Social media posts and graphics
  • Videos and multimedia
  • Canvas and other instructional materials

What is a screen reader?

Screen readers are software programs that convert digital text into speech or braille. They rely on:

  • Proper headings and document structure.
  • Descriptive link text.
  • Alternative text for images.
  • Logical reading order.

If content is visually clear but not structured correctly, a screen reader user may not be able to understand or navigate it.

What is alternative text?

Alternative text (alt text) provides a written description for images, making web content accessible to users with visual impairments who rely on screen readers, as well as for situations where images fail to load, by conveying the image’s content, function, and context so everyone can understand the visual information.

Accessibility Basics Everyone Should Know

You don’t need to be an expert to avoid common accessibility issues. The following fundamentals apply to most digital content.

Accessibility Task Force

The Accessibility Task Force, with representation from multiple areas including web content, instructional technology and learning systems, leads college-wide efforts to:

  • Coordinate accessibility planning and implementation.
  • Provide guidance, training, and shared resources.
  • Support awareness of accessibility standards and best practices.
  • Help establish consistent expectations across departments.

The Task Force serves as a coordinating and advisory body and does not create or publish individual content.

Getting Help & Next Steps

If you create or manage digital content:

  • Review the Accessibility Resources linked on this page.
  • Follow minimum requirements before submitting content for publishing.

Use built-in accessibility checkers in tools like Microsoft Word, Excel and Adobe Acrobat.

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