Blog Post

Education Blog
2 MIN READ

Inclusive and accessible Microsoft Education updates with OneNote Live Captions and Immersive Reader

MikeTholfsen's avatar
MikeTholfsen
Icon for Microsoft rankMicrosoft
Mar 02, 2022

We’re constantly working to build inclusive products, with the knowledge that accessibility improvements often create a better experience for all users. New updates to OneNote and Immersive Reader are built the principles of inclusive design and have the capacity to improve learning for anyone. Try these tools out for yourself!

 

OneNote Live Captions for more accessible note-taking

Today, we are beginning to roll out previously announced OneNote Live Captions. With OneNote Live Captions, students can listen to a lecture, presentation or other meeting while live streaming captions in any of 100+ languages right within OneNote. OneNote Live Captions fuses the free Microsoft Translator with OneNote, to let educators set up a Translator session that any student with OneNote can then connect to, and allows each student to choose from 100+ available languages to translate the lecture into. That means in the same class a students can translate to whatever language suits them best.  Students can pause the live captions, highlight parts, and a copy of the transcript is automatically saved into a “Transcripts” section of their notebook, allowing students to easily capture lectures and review them as needed. This feature will support all students – especially those building new language skills and those with learning, hearing, or processing disabilities – by supporting them with multiple modes of access live and opportunities to review and process after the fact.

Starting next week, OneNote Live Captions will be available for any OneNote education customer across web, Windows 10 app, Mac, and iPad. It will also work in Teams Desktop and Teams web. OneNote Live Captions will be coming to OneNote Desktop 365 later in 2022. To see OneNote Live Captions in action, watch
the video below.

 

Immersive Reader gains 10 new read-aloud languages

The Immersive Reader already has 60+ Neural text-to-speech read aloud languages, and today we are adding 10 new ones to the list.  The new Read Aloud languages include: Bengali (India), Icelandic (Iceland), Kazakh (Kazakhstan), Kannada (India), Lao (Laos), Macedonian (Republic of North Macedonia), Malayalam (India), Pashto (Afghanistan), Sinhala (Sri Lanka), Serbian (Serbia).

 

Immersive Reader now available in Lumio

Lumio is a digital learning tool that makes it easy to transform lessons into active, collaborative learning experiences to engage students on their devices, wherever they are. Lumio has recently integrated the Immersive Reader into their platform to make their content more inclusive.  More details on how to enable Immersive Reader in Lumio are here.

 

 

Immersive Reader now available Natterhub

Natterhub’s mission is to teach children to be safe and kind digital citizens, and we are so excited to announce that Natterhub has integrated the Immersive Reader to make learning more accessible.   Packed with 350+ lessons for children aged 5-11, Natterhub content is interactive, impactful and aligns with DfE (Eng), CfE (Scot), and UKCIS 'Education for a Connected World’

 

The opportunity to reach more learners by creating accessible experiences is a joy. When given the right tools, there’s no telling what students will do. We look forward to seeing how educators and students mobilize these new tools for more inclusive learning.

Group Product Manager

Microsoft Education

 

Updated Mar 02, 2022
Version 2.0
  • Hongtai1735's avatar
    Hongtai1735
    Copper Contributor

    When I click on the live caption function of my ipad's onenote, its window stays loaded (keeps spinning). Is this condition due to the fact that this feature is not yet fully open to the ipad or is it due to something else?

  • Dominic_Hunter's avatar
    Dominic_Hunter
    Copper Contributor

    Is there a translator App in the Microsoft Store? I use a Surface Pro8 in the classroom which casts to the board and allows me to walk around the room. If I'm tied to the mic in my phone for the translator app it will restrict my movements.

    Alternatively, what about putting the educator end of live captions in OneNote itself - In the class Notebook tab there could be a Launch Captions button that displays the code, then the mic in the PC/Surface I'm using is the thing capturing the voice.

  • cbudsga's avatar
    cbudsga
    Copper Contributor

    What is the accuracy rate of Live Captions? Is this feature ADA compliant?