Guidelines for Closed Captioning
In keeping with Accessibility Law and University policy, you should use closed captions or subtitles:
- When you have instructional content and video recorded and hosted in Online Learning Platforms (Distance Education, MOOCs, blended and flipped classes, etc.);
- For classroom lectures that are video recorded for student use (including classroom lecture capture, streamed capture, personal faculty capture);
- For video or film-based content presented in, required for or recorded in class (assigned videos or films, student-made videos or films presented in class);
- When your class involves communication between student and faculty via digital tools such as live discussions, chat, or live to video conference;
- For videos hosted on academic and non-academic websites on the bu.edu domain (those viewable within the BU community as well as by the general public);
- For library reserve material, for a course, that is video or film (including current purchases and archived films and videos);
- For training films, videos, etc. used in Human Resources, classrooms, labs, and/or departments;
- For promotional videos and marketing tools; or,
- When you have additional media required or requested for use by a user with a disability.
Caption instructional material and media according to the following list (in order of priority):
- Material for use by students, faculty or staff with disabilities
- Material which is in public-facing courses and/or webpages
- Material that will be used multiple times or over an extended period of time (will be used for more than one class or semester)
- Material that will be re-used in new courses
Captioning of captured classrooms may be considered a lower priority if it is a review of a face-to-face class, is to be used only one semester, is not needed by a student with a disability.
For more information, contact Dr. Lorraine Wolf, Director, lwolf@bu.edu
Also see our resources page for Faculty and Staff.