Ok George you have me intrigued. I have a demo version of Jaws which I am using to test speech in situations like this. However, although I can follow your clear instructions regarding “Alt text” and get the speech in WORD I am lost about the last bit about the braille in Duxbury. Can you give me a bit of a clue as to what you expect me to get? David From: George Bell Sent: Saturday, May 24, 2014 12:40 PM To: ueb-ed@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: [ueb-ed] Mathematics - Alt Text tip During a recent training session, it emerged that many of the attendees were unaware of how valuable Word’s Alt Text could be in preparing braille versions of mathematics material which included MathType. This is a £40 add-in for Word which allows you to create equations and such like in many other applications as well. They had been preparing tactile illustrations of many equations which was seriously time consuming and costly. Hopefully this simple example will not be destroyed by my Outlook. In the text is a MathType equation which appears as follows. Most screen readers will simply glace over this saying “Graphic”. However, if you right click on the MathType Object (the equation), the following will appear: If you now click on “Format Object”, and Select the “Alt Text” tab, you can add a description which explains the equation, such as shown below: When the screen reader now encounters this equation, it will read the description *you* have provided. However, there is a bonus when this is now imported from Word into the Duxbury Braille Translator. The equation itself will be converted, but in addition, the Alt Text will also be included in the braille text. I’ll leave you to ponder. George.