Thank you for this information.
Wolfgang Schuster
The inline heading in your example doesn’t work because \startparagraph forces the end of a paragraph for the preceding text.
As you want only tags for the content of your paragraph you can enclose your text in \bpar … \epar instead of \startparagraph … \stopparagraph.
That seems to work. I don't have the ability to directly examine the pdf's tags table, but the document appears to read correctly. Sections/subsections/paragraphs are identified. The subsection is inline with the following paragraph. I'm not sure what are the differences between \bpar and \startparagraph, so have used the later construction for the second paragraph in the subsection. \setuppapersize[letter] \setuptagging[state=start] \setuphead[chapter][style=\bf, number=no, align=middle] \setuphead[section][style=\bf, number=no] \setuphead[subsection][style=\bf, number=no, commandafter={.~}, textdistance=0cm, alternative=text] \starttext \startchapter[title=Chapter I] \startsection[title=Introduction] \startparagraph Beginning with the passage of section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1974, students with disabilities are participating in higher education in increasing numbers (Madaus, 2011). Students with psychiatric, learning, and cognitive impairment who once considered college out of reach are taking the plunge. … \stopparagraph \startsubsection[title=Demo Subsection] \bpar Numbers for all students moving from high school through a bachelors degree in Idaho are worse than in most of the nation. Go-on Idaho (2014), an organization dedicated to furthering our state's educational outcomes , relates …\epar \startparagraph The U. S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (2016) report that a person's level of education are linked to increased income and levels of unemployment. The more education a person has, the higher is the average wage and the lower the level of unemployment. Educational attainment matters. … \stopparagraph \stopsubsection \stopsection \stopchapter \stoptext