2025
June 16-18, 2025
Long Beach, CA

OTC’25 Speaker Portal

Thank you for presenting at the 2025 Online Teaching Conference at the Long Beach Convention Center in Long Beach, CA from Monday, June 16 – Wednesday, June 18, 2025. This page is intended to provide guidance and details for presenting at OTC’25.

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Guide to Presenting Accessibly

To support OTC’s commitment to accessibility, presenters play a critical role. To support the production and giving of accessible presentations, we have compiled this resource of good practices and techniques.

Designing

Presenters are encouraged to use the following guidelines to ensure that their presentations are visually accessible to attendees and when the slides are viewed on their own. Some of the guidelines also apply to creating accessible files for sharing.

Font Choice

  • Avoid fonts that use thin strokes in the characters.
  • Choose readable sans serif or serif fonts. Generally avoid script fonts. Limit use of monospaced fonts for special contexts, such as source code.
  • Suggested fonts include: Helvetica and its clones (Arial, Calibri, etc.), Gill Sans, Comic Sans (seriously!), Verdana, Franklin Gothic, Rockwell, Tahoma, Lucida, and Times New Roman.
  • Use underlining, italics, and boldface sparingly. Underlining should be used for links. Use bold and italics for emphasis on specific terms but not whole sentences.
  • Aim for a font size of 20-32 points. Generally, do not go below 18-point for slide content. Limit use of the smaller fonts to incidental information, such as an image source.
  • If you use any non-standard fonts, consider embedding the fonts in your presentation to avoid the headaches of font substitution that may effect sizing, change line breaks, and create missing symbols.

Colors

  • Choose text and background colors that have good contrast. You can use a contrast checker to check for good contrast. The web accessibility thresholds are not strictly relevant to slide presentations, but higher contrast is still better than lower. Avoid going lower than a contrast ratio of 3:1, although 4.5:1 would be an even better minimum. The Viz Palette Designer can be used to select color palettes.
  • Avoid using just color alone to give meaning to distinguish different elements on your slides. Not only is this relying on properly color-balanced projectors, some attendees may have color blindness. In addition to color, use patterns or labels to further distinguish elements.
  • For color blindness considerations, generally avoid strictly red-green or yellow-blue color combinations. These are the two most common types of color blindness. If you are uncertain about a color choice, a color blindness simulator may help.
  • Note that color contrast checkers already take into account color blindness. No additional checking for those situations is necessary.

Charts, Tables, and Images

  • Provide a title for each table as well as headings for columns and rows as necessary. Do not rely alone on your verbal patter to explain what a table is and means.
  • In charts and graphs, do not use just color. Add patterns, symbols, or labels to help distinguish different elements.
  • Be prepared to provide a description of any image that you use on a slide. Viewers with low vision, blindness, or obstructed views may otherwise miss the intended visual impact.

Videos and Animations

  • Provide a warning slide at the start of your talk if your talk uses a lot of animations or other types of movement to avoid causing nausea and dizziness in some viewers.
  • Avoid blinking text and animations that endlessly repeat.
  • If a video contains sound or dialogue, please try to use a version with captioning.

Presenting

Presenters can also take additional actions during the presentation to increase accessibility and inclusion:

  • If your presentation features lots of animations, videos, etc., please include a warning at the start of your talk. This is especially needed if any contain lots of flicker.
  • Describe images to the audience as you present, and give a brief description of a video before you play it if it has no captions.
  • Instead of asking your audience to read a slide, read it aloud to them instead. The audience may not be able to see the slides or could be viewing on a small screen.
  • Read aloud any URLs to the audience. Use a URL shortener like tinyurl or bit.ly to make it easier.
  • Since Code4Lib provides captioning, please turn off any automatic captioning that comes from PowerPoint, Google Slides, etc. These get burned into the recording and cannot be edited for correctness afterwards.

Sharing

Sharing your slides in advance of your session benefits accessibility in many ways. Being able to download the slides can help people who may not have a good view of the projected talk so they can follow along. Attendees can also refer to the slides afterwards to refresh their memories. Captioners (if being used) can use the slides to improve the quality of the live text stream by properly spelling jargon, names, etc.

How to Share

More details on how and where to share your slides will be provided at a later date.

Creating Accessible Files

To further promote disability access, presenters are encouraged to make the effort to provide their slides in accessible formats.

  • When possible, use the built-in features in the presentation software to generate charts and tables as the software will format the data in ways generally more accessible to assistive technologies.
  • Images, graphs, and data visualizations should include alternate text that explains both what it is and what important aspects should be takeaways.
  • Utilize any built-in features in your presentation software that promote accessibility. This includes PowerPoint’s built-in accessibility checker and Google Slide’s accessibility features.
  • If you convert your slides into another format, like PDF, check that new format for accessibility.

Standard On-Site A/V Production Set-Up for All Presentations:

In planning for your session, please be reminded that each session is 50 minutes including any Q&A and self-introductions as needed. We anticipate an AVERAGE of sixty to seventy (60 to 70) participants per session, but numbers will vary and cannot be determined in advance as registrants do not sign up for specific sessions at the time of registration. Rooms will be set in a combination of schoolroom and theatre style where space allows.

Additionally, each room will include…

·         Podium with Microphone (with the exception of the smallest rooms)

·         Head table for four (4)

·         Laptop Sound

·         LCD Projector package (screen, projectors and all cables)

·         Wireless remote

·         Wi-Fi

·         Water station (nearby if not in room)

From a technology standpoint, we ask presenters to bring their own laptops with presentations loaded AND on a back-up flash drive to be safe and a wireless remote (clicker) as desired. If you bring a Mac be sure to bring the adaptor / dongle as well. A small supply of loaner laptops and clickers will be available for emergency purposes only.  Please note that, due to budgetary restrictions we are not able to provide additional microphones and, though we will do our best to accommodate, other requests will be evaluated for cost prior to approval.

We ask that you submit your PPT presentation by Wednesday June 11th so that we may convert it to a PDF and include it in the Conference App for participants.

Please Click Here to Upload Presentation with session ID and title (ex.  1A Campfires in Hyperspace).


Your OTC’25 Speaker Contact:

Feel free to email speakers@onlineteachingconference.org with any questions or concerns.

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