Accessibility and Assistive Technology

Charts, Graphs, and Tables: Alternative Text (Microsoft Word)

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A great practice to follow is providing your users with a text description of the chart or graph. The text description can also serve as the chart’s or graph's summary — and this addresses a significant caveat of data visualization: not only beautifully presenting the data but also helping the user conclude. Although the story the data tell may seem self-evident to the chart’s or graph's author, the viewer, on the other hand, may struggle to connect the dots: “Value A has been on the rise throughout the last four years, but decreased significantly in the previous quarter."

When creating charts or graphs, you want to make them as accessible as possible. 

If your graph or chart has been included in your document or as an image, you must ensure that you have included alt text for the image.

What to include in your Alt Text and Descriptions

  • Summarize what is going on in your graph, what conclusions someone can draw from this figure, and why it was important enough to include in your work.  
  • Increase the accessibility of your charts by including tabular data in addition to your chart or graph. This allows users accessing your information with a screen reader to have still a way to navigate through your information without missing out on anything.  
  • Try to keep your description to less than 80-100 characters. Some screen readers are incompatible with longer alt-text descriptions. 

How to make it more inclusive:

  • Right Click on the chart, graph, or table and select "Edit Alt Text..."
Bar graph with a menu from right-clicking on the graph.
  • Fill in the information in the newly opened field.
The add alt. text pop-up menu.

Why is it so important to create accessible tables, charts, and graphs?

  • Charts and graphs display complicated information as a visual, and it can be hard to conceptualize what is going on in a graph if you are only presented with a list of numbers in a table. 
    • Adding a text description to your audience can help your visually impaired and sighted users better understand and interpret your information:
  • Explain to your audience:
    • Why is your graph, chart, or table important?
    • What is important about it?
    • What is the main idea? What do you want your audience to understand?
    • How is this important in context?  

Keep Things Simple!

A chart, graph, or table should be simple. 

  • Try to keep your data as clear and concise as possible! 

Some things you should look for are:

Black and white bar graph showing the different color contrast.
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