Use VoiceOver to create a Keynote presentation on iPad
You can create a Keynote presentation on your iPhone or iPad using VoiceOver, an advanced screen reader that lets you use your device without seeing the screen. Start with a theme—a set of predesigned slide layouts and elements—then add your own content. Each theme uses coordinated fonts, text styles, and colors for a unified look.
VoiceOver can also interpret data from charts in your presentation by speaking axis descriptions, summarizing the data and its trends, and playing a sonification of the data.
Choose a theme
You can choose a theme with standard or wide slide sizes, or a custom theme—a theme you’ve modified and saved to use again later. You choose a theme in the template chooser.
When you first open Keynote, the presentation manager opens. Swipe left or right (or use the left and right arrows on a keyboard) until you hear “Add button,” then double-tap to open the template chooser.
To navigate through the themes in the template chooser, swipe left and right until you hear the name of one you want to use, then double-tap to select it.
For example, if you wanted to create a presentation to showcase photographs with a simple, black background, you might choose the Photo Essay theme.
If you don’t want to use a theme from the Standard category, use the Containers setting in the VoiceOver rotor to navigate to the template categories, swipe left or right until you hear “Wide” or “My Themes,” then double-tap to jump to theme options in that category.
Change the slide layout
You can quickly change the look of a slide by applying a different master slide to it. You do this in the Format sidebar.
In Keynote on iPad, open the VoiceOver rotor and use the Containers setting to navigate from the canvas to the toolbar.
Swipe left or right (or use the left and right arrows on a keyboard) to navigate through the toolbar until you hear “Format button,” then double-tap to open the Format sidebar.
To hear the current slide layout, swipe right, then double-tap to open the Choose a Master menu.
To choose a new master slide layout from the Choose a Master menu, swipe until you hear the one you want, then double-tap it.
Add your own text
Master slides include placeholder text boxes with text for titles, subtitles, body text, and other text elements. You can replace any placeholder text with your own in the canvas.
In Keynote on iPad, open the VoiceOver rotor and use the Containers setting to navigate to the canvas.
To navigate through the content in the canvas, swipe left or right (or use the left and right arrows on a keyboard). When you hear the text you want to replace, double-tap to select the text box.
To add your text, double-tap again, then type.
Add your own media
You can replace the placeholder media on a slide to add your own images and video. You do this in the canvas.
In Keynote on iPad, open the VoiceOver rotor and use the Containers setting to navigate to the canvas.
To navigate through the content in the canvas, swipe left or right (or use the left and right arrows on a keyboard). When you hear the name of an image you want to replace, double-tap to select it.
Swipe left or right through the image’s handles until you hear “Replace Image button,” then double-tap to open the Albums sidebar.
Do one of the following to select the media you want to use:
To use a photo or video in the Albums sidebar: Select an album, then double-tap to select the media you want to add.
To use a photo or video from iCloud or another service: Double-tap Insert from below the albums, then double-tap to select the media you want to add.
To use a new photo or video: Choose Take Photo or Video, then choose Use Photo or Use Video.
The image or video automatically replaces the placeholder media on the slide.
You can also insert your own shapes and other objects by choosing the Insert menu in the toolbar. To navigate to the toolbar from the slide layout area, use the Containers setting in the VoiceOver rotor.
To add accessibility descriptions to your images, audio, and videos (which are read by VoiceOver and other assistive technology), see Add an image description, Add an audio description, or Add a video description.
Play a presentation
When you play a presentation on your Mac, VoiceOver speaks the text and images on the current slide. The presentation plays in full screen.
To learn how to play your presentation on a separate display, see Play a presentation on a separate display.
In Keynote on iPad, open the VoiceOver rotor and use the Containers setting to navigate from the slide layout area to the toolbar.
In the toolbar, swipe left or right (or use the left and right arrows on the keyboard) until you hear the slide you want to begin with, then double-tap to select it.
Navigate back to the toolbar, swipe left or right until you hear “Play button,” then double-tap to play the slideshow.
If you’re using a keyboard, you can also press Option-Command-P to play the slideshow from that slide.
To navigate around the slide and hear images and text, swipe left or right.
To advance through the presentation, do any of the following:
Go to the next slide or build: Double-tap.
Go back a slide or reset the builds on the slide: Three-finger swipe.
Jump to a different slide: Use the Action setting in the VoiceOver rotor to choose “Show slide navigator,” swipe left or right until you hear the slide you want to play, then double-tap to jump to that slide.
Use VoiceOver to interpret chart data
VoiceOver can speak useful data comprehension information about certain types of charts in your presentation, including axis information, the shape of the data, minimum values, maximum values, and more. VoiceOver can also play a sonification of the chart data, which represents the values in the chart, from left to right, using a series of different pitches.
Select the chart in your presentation you want to get more information about.
Open the VoiceOver rotor, then select the Data Comprehension setting.
Swipe up or down to choose any of the following:
Speak axis descriptions: Speaks the axis labels and the range of each axis.
Play chart sonification: Plays a series of tones that represents values in the chart, from left to right, using different pitches. The higher the value, the higher the pitch.
Speak series summary: Lists the direction of the data (such as increasing or decreasing), the shape of the data (such as logarithmic or linear), the strength of the association, and any outliers.
Speak numerical summary: Lists the minimum, maximum, and mean of the data in the chart.