Best Practices for Web Documents
Whenever possible, information should be presented as a web pagerather than a linked document, to ensure that it is digitally accessible to the widest audience. Per the Website CMS User Policy , documents linked from ohio.edu must comply with Document Accessibility Guidelines . Each document should be carefully reviewed before posting on a website. Ask yourself these questions:
- Who is the audience and how will it be used?
- Does it really need to be on the website, or is there a better method of distribution?
- Is it internal and could be accessed through a department shared drive?
- Is it a print piece that should be handed out in person?
Is the Content Still Needed on the Website?
- Make sure the content is not duplicated somewhere else on OHIO websites. If the document is "owned" by another department, link directly to their webpage.
- Most Word documents can easily be made into a webpage.
- Documents like handbooks or policy manuals can be created as webpages using a left menu for navigation of pages. See an example: Counselor Education Graduate Program Handbook »
- Many forms can be created electronically using Microsoft Forms or Qualtrics . This will improve the accessibility of the document and make it easier for the user to complete.
Does it Have to be the Actual Document?
- All documents that are linked on the site must be fully tested for accessibility. As there is no current in-house office to fully check document accessibility, all documents must be sent to our vendor to review. The cost of the remediation is billed to the requesting department. You should use proper creation techniques to make document as accessible as you can before submitting them to UCM to send to the vendor.
- Best practices for formatting can be found at Document Accessibility Guidelines .
- Once the PDF is remediated, it should be uploaded to your office's SharePoint folder and linked from the webpage.
- Note: A fillable PDF form in SharePoint must be downloaded by the end user before the fillable fields will be viewable. (It is best to make forms electronic instead of using a fillable form.)
- Very few documents will be uploaded to Drupal.
Accessibility Implementation Deadlines
May 1, 2024
Any new document (including PDF, Excel, Word docs, etc.) must be remediated before it can be posted on a Drupal website.
October 1, 2024
All existing documents must be reviewed and a decision for action made.
Determine if the document:
- can be removed from website and deleted from Drupal database
- can be made into a webpage
- must stay a document and be remediated
May 1, 2025
Any document linked from ohio.edu must be remediated or it will be removed from the website until it is in compliance.