I need to prepare accessible PDFs of a number of PowerPoint presentations for posting on a Web site. The PDFs need to include the slides and the speaker notes and should be in a format that can be easily printed and read. To further complicate things, the slides are both graph and equation heavy -- the equations were entered using the equation editor so they do not appear in the outline view.
The two approaches I've tried so far are:
1) Include speaker notes as annotations. This works fairly well for the slides, but I haven't been able to figure out a way to print it that is easy to read. Even when I select "Large" for the font size, the annotation text is pretty tiny.
2) Create a PDF of the Notes layout. Appearance-wise, this is exactly what my client is looking for, but then the slides come through as graphics (which would mean all the slide content would have to be included as alt-text or added to the speaker notes, right?).
I'm hoping that I am missing an obvious strategy, either way, any suggestions on how to meeting accessibility requirements and my clients desired layout, would be great appreciated - thank you!
Lori Kassuba is an AUC Expert and Community Manager for AcrobatUsers.com.