Captioning
Captioning is displaying audio as text on a screen or other visual device. Captioning can occur at a live event, such as a lecture. Captioning can also be applied to a recording, such as a movie. Captioning includes both the spoken word and other sounds that are important to an event or communication. To be effective, captioning must be timely, complete, accurate, and efficient.
There are two general types of captions: closed and open. Closed captions, often identified by [CC], are available in a separate stream from a given media source. Closed captions can be turned on or off by the user. Open captions are “baked” into the media and are always visible.
Articles
-
About Recreation Accessibility
ADA regulations about access to outdoor recreation for people with disabilities: background explainer, fact sheets, and infographics. -
The ADA and Fixed-Route Buses
Info and easy how-to videos that explain the ADA regulations that ensure an accessible bus ride for people with disabilities.
Ask About the ADA
- Open vs. Closed Caption Videos
Q: I am trying to make videos on my website more accessible for my customers by adding captioning. Can you explain the difference between open and closed captioning? A: Good question. Of course, you&...
Infographics
Webinars
- Online Course Accessibility in the Postsecondary Environment: The Reason and the Design
December 06, 2016
This webinar will explore the requirement for college and university online courses to be accessible. It will review the relevant laws and explain their relationship to a postsecondary institution's o...