 Accessibility Toolkit in Moodle 3.11 In collaboration with Brickfield Education Labs, teachers now benefit from a course accessibility checker to find and identify accessibility issues. Useful information is displayed graphically. Admins can sign up to the starter toolkit or purchase advanced functionality from Brickfield Education Labs. The premium services are available on a yearly subscription and provide extra features on top of the starter, including enhanced analysis of content, advanced reporting, automated fixing of accessibility issues and improved workflows for users. In this Moodle 3.11 site, our administrator goes to Site Administration, Admin Tools, Accessibility and registers her site online with Brickfield Education Labs. She can activate this and specify some default settings from Accessibility Toolkit settings and now her teachers can check the content of their courses. Teacher Mr Wilson turns on the editing in his course and adds the accessibility review block. And note, this is not seen by his learners. He requests a review and after some time receives a report with accessibility errors. We can see here, for example, that there are two layout errors and five link errors. A heat map shows a coloured and textual view of the areas of concern and he can toggle this by clicking the icon. He can download the report or, as he's doing here, he can view it online. The first tab displays a list of errors with a link to go directly to the locations and correct them. The Activity Breakdown displays a ratio of past to failed instances in total per activity and the Content Type Chart page displays the error breakdown per content type group in our Teacher's Case, Layout and Links. There's a useful summary report and the Advanced tab presents the advanced functionality available if upgrading to the purchased Enterprise version. Our teacher uses the Accessibility Review Block and Toolkit to correct his highlighted errors. The system automatically re-analyses the updated content after any edit, updates the resulting error data and displays this when the teacher next views his course. And Mr Wilson is happy to learn that his course now passes. To summarise, an Accessibility Toolkit is available from Brickfield Education Labs, allowing teachers to find and identify accessibility issues in their courses.