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Every donation makes a difference in the lives of our team and community members.
If you’re a professor, lecturer or instructional designer at a public college or university, you may have heard about the April 24, 2026 ADA Title II compliance deadline. You may have even gotten an email from your IT department or provost’s office about it.
What you probably haven’t gotten is a clear answer to the question that actually matters to you: What does this mean for my course materials, and what support do I have to fix them?
For most faculty, that answer is: not much. And that’s a problem. When the deadline hits, the responsibility doesn’t land on IT. It doesn’t land on the provost. In large part, it lands on you.
In April 2024, the U.S. Department of Justice finalized new rules under Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act, establishing enforceable digital accessibility standards for public colleges and universities. The standard required is the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.1 Level AA. This standard applies not just to your institution’s website, but to the digital content faculty create and distribute as part of academic programs.
The impacted learning tools include:
If it’s in your LMS and students need it to participate in your class, it’s within the scope of WCAG requirements.
Here’s what’s happening on most campuses right now: Administrators are focused on auditing websites and institutional portals. IT departments are updating infrastructure. Disability services offices are doing their best with limited staff.
And faculty are largely on their own.
Consider a professor who has taught the same course for 10 years. Their LMS contains hundreds of documents, most of them created before accessibility was part of anyone’s workflow. They very likely have scanned PDFs without machine-readable text, as well as slide decks with images and no alt text. Their lecture recordings might have auto-generated captions that mangle technical terminology, or YouTube embeds with no captions at all.
Remediating all of that takes time, expertise and tools that most faculty simply don’t have. And because institutions have been slow to build out faculty-facing support, many professors are discovering this problem on their own, right before the April 2026 deadline.
For faculty, WCAG 2.1 compliance means your course materials need to meet these practical criteria:
None of these are insurmountable. But none of them are quick, either, especially when you’re working with years of existing content at scale.
Here’s something that surprises many faculty: Your institution is responsible for the accessibility of third-party content you use in your courses. If you’re embedding a YouTube video that has no captions, linking to a publisher’s inaccessible PDF or using a third-party quiz tool that doesn’t meet WCAG standards, those are compliance gaps even if they weren’t created by you or your institution.
This doesn’t mean you need to personally caption every video you’ve ever shown in class. It does mean that your institution needs a clear policy on third-party content, and that faculty need guidance on how to evaluate and substitute inaccessible materials.
Many institutions have turned to automated accessibility checkers as a first pass. These tools are useful (as we examined in this guide), but they catch only a fraction of accessibility issues. Research consistently shows that automated tools identify approximately 30% of accessibility errors. The rest require human evaluation.
This matters for faculty because it means there’s no quick technical fix.
You can’t run a script over your course materials and declare them compliant. Remediation requires a human to look at your content, understand its purpose, and make informed judgments about how to make it accessible.
For complex academic content — such as mathematical formulas, scientific diagrams, STEM notation and dense tables of data — that human judgment requires both accessibility expertise and subject-matter awareness. This is not a task that can be crowdsourced to a general-purpose AI tool.
If you’re a faculty member trying to get ahead of this, here’s a practical starting point:
Accessibility compliance can feel like one more unfunded mandate landing on faculty who are already stretched thin. That frustration is real and understandable.
But it’s also worth remembering what’s at stake on the other side of this: Students with visual impairments who can’t read a scanned PDF. Students who are deaf or hard of hearing who get nothing from a lecture recording without captions. Students with cognitive or learning disabilities who rely on well-structured documents to parse dense academic content.
These students are in your classes now. The deadline might be forcing digital inclusion, but the problems it is meant to correct have existed for a very long time.
The institutions that use this moment to build lasting accessibility infrastructure will come out of it with more equitable learning environments. Faculty members who understand what accessible content actually looks like will be better positioned to create it, regardless of what regulations require.
Aspiritech specializes in accessibility testing and remediation for higher education institutions. Our team is led by autistic tech professionals with deep expertise in WCAG standards, and is ready to work with universities and faculty to audit course content, remediate existing materials and build sustainable accessibility workflows.
Whether your institution needs assistance with auditing and remediating the accessibility of its digital, or with building publishing workflows with accessibility best practices baked in, we’re ready to help.
Learn more about our accessibility services or schedule a free strategy session with our team to get started.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Institutions should consult legal counsel regarding specific compliance obligations.