Fix a Canvas file for accessibility in 30 seconds. Steal proven AI prompts. Grab a printable checklist. The shortcuts every teacher should already have.
Drop a file. Get it back cleaned, tagged, and audit-ready in under a minute. Works for the formats teachers actually upload.
Upload a .docx, .pptx, .pdf, or full Canvas .imscc export. We add alt text, fix heading order, tag PDFs, and return a clean file plus a before/after report. Helps your UDOIT score reach 100%.
Each card opens inline below. Bookmark this page — new resources added monthly.
The 10-point printable checklist for course material accessibility. Tape it above your desk.
View checklist ↓The 30-second rule for image descriptions, with good vs bad examples for charts, photos, and decorative images.
Read the guide ↓Free tools for auto-captioning Zoom, Panopto, and YouTube. Plus the 5-minute editing pass that matters.
Read the guide ↓Why untagged PDFs fail WCAG, and the 3-minute Acrobat fix that solves 90% of issues.
Read the guide ↓Copy-paste prompts for lesson plans, parent emails, differentiated reading, and rubrics. Above ↑
Jump to prompts ↑Captioning, screen readers, alt-text generators, TTS — curated free + low-cost options.
See the list ↓Print this. Use it before posting any file to Canvas.
Official spec: W3C WCAG 2.1 AA Quick Reference.
Alt text describes what the image conveys to the reader, not how it visually looks. If the image is decorative (a divider line, a stock photo of "people working") mark it as decorative — don't waste the screen-reader user's time.
Good: "Bar chart showing 2025 enrollment grew 12% over 2024, driven by graduate programs."
Bad: "Bar chart."
Good: "Diagram of the water cycle: evaporation, condensation, precipitation, collection."
Bad: "Image of the water cycle showing arrows and clouds."
Rule of thumb: if you were describing this image to a student over the phone, what would you say? That's your alt text. Aim for under 125 characters.
Reference: WebAIM — Alternative Text.
Auto-captions get you ~85% accuracy. WCAG and ADA need ~99%. That last 14% takes ~3 minutes per minute of video — but you can outsource it cheaply.
Best free auto-caption tools:
For polished captions: Rev.com charges $1.50/min for human-edited 99% accuracy with 24-hour turnaround.
Untagged PDFs fail screen readers — they're just images of text to assistive tech. Tagging tells the reader "this is a heading, this is a paragraph, this is a list."
If you have Adobe Acrobat Pro:
Don't have Acrobat Pro? Skip the manual work — drop your PDF into the Maxademics Fixer, it tags PDFs using LibreOffice + qpdf and returns a tagged copy.
Lesson plans, quizzes, rubrics, parent emails, differentiated worksheets — these tools cut hours off your week. Free to start, no credit card.
The Swiss Army knife. Best for generating lesson plans, drafting parent emails, and explaining concepts at multiple grade levels.
Try free →Best for analyzing long PDFs, syllabi, IEPs, and grading rubrics. Stronger at nuanced feedback and tone-matching parent communications.
Try free →Lives inside Docs, Sheets, Slides, and Gmail. If your school is on Google Workspace, this is the lowest-friction AI to adopt.
Try free →Built for teachers. Paste any text or URL — get a reading-level adjusted version, comprehension questions, vocab list, and summary.
Try free →Battle-tested prompts that turn ChatGPT or Claude into a teaching co-pilot.
Lesson plan in 60 secondsBeyond "write me a lesson plan." These ideas let students use AI critically — building skills they'll need for a working world that already runs on these tools.
Pro tip: Frame AI as a "thinking partner" not a "shortcut." The students who win in college and careers are the ones who can direct AI well — that's a teachable skill.
College enrollment in the US peaked in 2010. It's now falling, and the steepest drop is just starting. Here's what the numbers say, and why it matters whether you teach high-school seniors or freshman comp.
It's not one cause — it's a stack:
If you teach high school: Your students will face a college market in flux — some schools desperate, some unaffordable, some closed. Help them ask "what does this credential get me?" and "what does it cost?" — not just "is it a good name?"
If you teach undergrads: Your institution is competing for fewer students. Retention matters more than ever. The schools that thrive will be the ones where students feel seen — your relationship with them is part of the value proposition now.
If you're in admin or program design: Programs need to show ROI. The clearest winners: applied programs with employer pipelines, certificate-stacking models, and accelerated formats. Liberal arts can still win — but only with explicit career-translation work.
Data sources: WICHE Knocking at the College Door projections, National Student Clearinghouse, IIE Open Doors Report. Updated 2026.
Picked from professional development reading lists and the books most-recommended by veteran teachers. Affiliate links — buying through here supports the site at no extra cost to you.








Affiliate disclosure: As an Amazon Associate, Maxademics earns from qualifying purchases. We only link to books educators actually recommend.
Maxademics started because making a single Canvas file accessible was eating an entire afternoon — and that was after years of doing it. If a veteran teacher needs that long, what does the brand-new adjunct do?
Everything here exists for one reason: cut the busywork. The Canvas Fixer is free. The resources are free. The AI prompts and book picks are free. The site stays free because it earns a small commission when teachers buy books through Amazon (and someday, a few discreet ads).
If something here saves you a Sunday afternoon, that's the whole point.
— Maxa