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Web Accessibility for Education: Compliance Guide

Last updated: March 30, 2026

TLDR

Educational institutions receiving federal funding must comply with Section 508 and ADA. LMS platforms, course materials, and student portals are the primary enforcement targets. OCR complaints peak at semester starts when students encounter inaccessible materials. Institutions that scan and fix accessibility issues proactively avoid OCR investigations and the remediation timelines they impose.

Education Accessibility Is Under Active Enforcement

The Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights does not wait for institutions to figure out accessibility on their own. OCR actively investigates complaints and has issued resolution agreements requiring specific WCAG 2.1 AA conformance timelines. Institutions that cannot demonstrate ongoing accessibility efforts face remediation mandates that are more expensive and disruptive than proactive compliance.

The pattern is predictable: semester starts, students encounter inaccessible course materials or registration systems, complaints get filed. Institutions that scan and fix issues before the semester have fewer complaints to deal with.

Where Education Sites Fail

LMS Content

The learning management system itself may be reasonably accessible, but the content uploaded to it often is not. Faculty upload PDF syllabi without tagged structure, lecture recordings without captions, slide decks with images that lack alt text, and quiz questions that do not work with screen readers.

This is the most common OCR complaint trigger in education. The platform works, but the content does not.

Student Portals

Course registration, financial aid applications, grade viewing, and academic advising systems all live behind authenticated portals. These systems frequently have complex navigation structures, unlabeled form fields, and dynamic content updates that screen readers cannot detect.

Registration systems with dropdown menus that only respond to mouse hover, date selectors that require clicking, and course search filters that are not keyboard-accessible create barriers at the moments students need access most.

Online Assessment

Timed exams present specific accessibility challenges. A timer that counts down visually but is not announced to screen readers leaves a blind student unaware of remaining time. Multiple-choice options that cannot be selected via keyboard prevent a motor-impaired student from answering questions. Mathematical notation rendered as images without MathML alternatives excludes screen reader users.

The OCR Investigation Process

When a student or parent files an accessibility complaint with OCR:

  1. OCR reviews the complaint and determines whether it has jurisdiction
  2. If accepted, OCR notifies the institution and begins investigation
  3. The investigation evaluates the institution’s web properties against Section 508 and WCAG standards
  4. OCR issues findings — either a letter of resolution (no violation) or a resolution agreement (violations found)
  5. Resolution agreements specify remediation steps and timelines, typically 12-24 months

Institutions under resolution agreements face ongoing monitoring. The cost of remediation under OCR oversight — including staff time, consultant fees, and technology procurement — significantly exceeds the cost of proactive accessibility scanning and fixing.

What Education Institutions Need

Effective accessibility compliance for education requires:

  • Web scanning — automated testing of public-facing sites, portals, and LMS pages
  • Content auditing — identifying inaccessible uploaded documents across courses
  • Policy enforcement — tools that help IT teams track and report on accessibility across departments
  • Ongoing monitoring — semester-over-semester scanning to catch new issues from new course content

A11yProof handles web scanning and monitoring. It scans your institution’s web properties, identifies WCAG violations, and generates code-level fixes. Scheduled scans catch regressions before the next semester’s complaint cycle. Starting at $79/month for up to 5 domains — covering your main site, student portal, and key department sites.

Need accessibility compliance for Education? There's a simpler way.

A11yProof starts at from $29/month — scan unlimited pages, up and running in 5 minutes.

The Department of Education's OCR resolved over 18,000 complaints in fiscal year 2023

Source: U.S. Department of Education OCR Annual Report

K-12 and higher education are among the fastest-growing categories for digital accessibility enforcement

Source: Seyfarth Shaw ADA Title III Lawsuit Report, 2023

Top Education Industries by Accessibility Compliance Need
Metro AreaEstablishments
K-12 school districts13,000
Higher education institutions6,000
EdTech platforms10,000
Total — EDU29,000+
Education Web Accessibility Risk Areas
ComponentAccessibility IssueRegulatory ExposurePriority
LMS course contentInaccessible uploaded documents, missing video captionsSection 508, ADACritical
Student portalComplex navigation, unlabeled form fieldsSection 508, ADACritical
Online exams/quizzesTimer not accessible, answer options not keyboard-navigableADAHigh
Course registrationDynamic form elements not announced to screen readersADAHigh
Faculty/staff websitesInaccessible PDFs, images without alt textSection 508Medium
Library database searchFilter controls not keyboard-accessible, results layout issuesSection 508Medium

Compliance Requirements — Education

Educational institutions receiving federal funding must comply with Section 508 and ADA. LMS platforms, course materials, and student portals are primary targets.

Q&A

What accessibility regulations apply to educational institutions?

Educational institutions receiving federal funding — which includes virtually all public K-12 districts and most colleges and universities — must comply with Section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act and Section 504. ADA Title II covers public institutions, and Title III covers private institutions open to the public. The Department of Education's Office for Civil Rights actively enforces these requirements and has issued resolution agreements requiring WCAG 2.1 AA conformance.

Q&A

What accessibility scanning features matter most for educational institutions?

Education sites need scanning that handles LMS content (uploaded documents, embedded videos, quiz interfaces), authenticated student portals, and the wide variety of document formats used in course materials (PDFs, PowerPoints, Word documents). A11yProof scans web pages and identifies issues in dynamic LMS content. For document accessibility, institutions also need PDF remediation tools alongside web scanning.

Industry Regulations — Education

OCR (Office for Civil Rights) complaints peak at the start of academic semesters when students encounter inaccessible course materials.

Ready to make your Education site accessible?

Does our LMS vendor handle accessibility compliance for us?
Your LMS vendor (Canvas, Blackboard, Moodle) is responsible for the platform's accessibility, but you are responsible for the content uploaded to it. Inaccessible PDFs, videos without captions, and images without alt text uploaded by faculty are your institution's compliance responsibility. The platform being accessible does not make inaccessible content accessible.
What happens when a student files an OCR complaint about accessibility?
OCR investigates the complaint, which can take months. If the investigation finds violations, OCR issues a resolution agreement requiring specific remediation steps and timelines. Failure to comply can result in loss of federal funding. Proactive accessibility scanning and remediation gives you documented evidence of compliance efforts.
How do we handle faculty-uploaded content that is inaccessible?
Start with policy: require captions on all video content, accessible document formats for course materials, and alt text on images. Then use scanning tools to identify existing inaccessible content and prioritize remediation. Automated scanning helps IT teams identify the scale of the problem across hundreds or thousands of course pages.
Are EdTech platforms required to be accessible?
EdTech platforms used by educational institutions receiving federal funding must be accessible. Many institutions now require VPATs (Voluntary Product Accessibility Templates) during procurement to verify vendor accessibility claims. If your EdTech platform cannot produce a current VPAT showing WCAG 2.1 AA conformance, you risk losing institutional customers.
How do we make online exams accessible?
Exam timers need to be adjustable and announced to screen readers. Answer options (multiple choice, matching) must be keyboard-navigable. Essay response areas need proper labels. Mathematical content needs MathML or similar accessible markup. Extended time accommodations must be built into the LMS configuration, not handled as manual overrides.

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