Make Your Images Accessible

Generate accessibility-compliant alt text, figure descriptions, and transcribed text using educational accessibility standards.

How to Use

1

Upload Your Image

Select or drag and drop any chart, diagram, or image that needs accessibility descriptions.

2

Add Context (Optional)

Describe how the image relates to your curriculum or learning objectives for more accurate results.

3

Generate Descriptions

Our AI analyzes your image and creates institutional-standard accessibility content instantly.

4

Copy & Use

Receive alt text, figure descriptions, long descriptions, and transcribed text ready for immediate use.

Get Started

Upload an image and get instant accessibility descriptions generated by our AI bot.

Latest generation model with superior reasoning and image analysis capabilities for the most accurate accessibility descriptions.

Educational Accessibility Best Practices

This AI-powered tool is designed to help educators and content creators generate accessible image descriptions for digital learning materials. It follows established educational accessibility standards and proven best practices.

🎯 Education-Focused

Generates descriptions tailored to educational accessibility standards

📝 Four Content Types

Alt text, figure descriptions, long descriptions, and transcribed text

📖 Educational Focus

Prioritizes learning objectives and pedagogical value

♿ Institutional Standards

Follows established accessibility and style guidelines

Alt Text Standards

  • 120 characters maximum for optimal screen reader use
  • Use active voice and present tense
  • Spell out units in full (e.g., "milligrams per liter")
  • Use "to" for ranges (e.g., "5 to 10" not "5-10")
  • Focus on educational content and key data points

Figure Descriptions

  • Lead with the "so what?" - Begin with the main finding or biological significance
  • Use Kroodsma-style structure - Start with interpretation, then supporting details
  • Make it educational - Focus on what students should learn from the visual data
  • Stand-alone content - Descriptions should be meaningful without reading full text
  • Include quantitative results - Add specific data points when they support the main message
  • Connect to learning objectives - Link visual patterns to course concepts and curriculum goals
  • Avoid generic language - Skip phrases like "shows" or "depicts" without specific detail

Long Descriptions

  • Always begin: "This image is a [type] showing..."
  • Emphasize educational takeaway and relationships
  • Use plain language and short clauses
  • Include quantitative data when relevant for learning
  • Never restate paragraph text or captions

Transcribed Text

  • Preserve all visible text exactly as shown
  • Include axis labels, legends, titles, and data values
  • List frequency distribution bins with exact ranges
  • Maintain logical reading order
  • Note "No text visible in image" when applicable

Contact & Contribute

This tool is open source and hosted on GitHub. We welcome contributions and feedback!