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a11y·a11y (digital accessibility)byThinker33

Accessibility in Conferencing

I participated in a webinar yesterday with the Center for Innovation, Design, and Digital Learning focused on creating Accessible Conferences in Higher Education. The panelists and I tried to provide a lot of helpful resources and strategies for promoting inclusion for people with disabilities during a conference or presentation.

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lemmy.ca

I am wonding if Austons points on having a non-particpant break out room and making web cams optional applies to elearning as well. My organization demands these things from learners and its not very well received by anyone.

If I had some research showing why this is a bad idea I am wondering if I could get them to consider changing the policy.

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Thinker33reply
lemmy.world

This study on Zoom camera use found that students turn off their cameras because of personal appearance, people being in the background, and slow internet connection. A Stanford study identified constant camera use as a cause for Zoom fatigue and recommended audio-only breaks. Educause on equitable camera use highlights best practices at the end of the article like a flexible policy, using icebreakers, and providing alternatives. Hopefully, these articles are helpful and might lead to your institution creating a more flexible policy.

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