1 / 42

Chapter 5

Chapter 5. Word Processing Skills. Chapter 5 Lessons. Lesson 5-1 The Word User Interface Lesson 5-2 Apply the Eight Keys of Great Communication Lesson 5-3 Format with the Ribbon and mini Toolbar Lesson 5-4 Format business Documents

kordell
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 5

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 5 Word Processing Skills

  2. Chapter 5 Lessons Lesson 5-1 The Word User Interface Lesson 5-2 Apply the Eight Keys of Great Communication Lesson 5-3 Format with the Ribbon and mini Toolbar Lesson 5-4 Format business Documents Lesson 5-5Correct and format Business Correspondence Lesson 5-6 build Informative Tables Chapter 5

  3. Word in the Academic and business worlds • Book reviews, essays, and themes • Web pages and blog entries • Invitations, agendas, and announcements • Advertisements and sales brochures • Presentations for the press • Public relations and media campaigns • Academic and business reports • Résumés and career documents Word can be a big help as you create academic or business projects: Chapter 5

  4. Lesson 5-1 The Word User Interface In this Lesson You Will: 1. Learn to use the tabs and ribbons of the Word user interface. 2. Modify the Quick Access Toolbar, document views, zooming, and scrolling features. 3. Create a book report while learning to create, name, and save Word fi les. Chapter 4

  5. Learn the Word User Interface Tabs File tab Home tab Quick Access toolbar Ribbon Scroll bar Zoom Status bar Chapter 5

  6. Word Tabs Chapter 5

  7. Your View on the Word World • The Views tab allows you to quickly change the way you look at a document: • Print Layout • Full-Screen Reading • Web Layout • Outline • Draft Chapter 5

  8. Lesson 5-2 Apply the Eight Keys of Great Communication In this Lesson You Will: 1. Apply the eight keys of dynamic digital communication. 2. Track document statistics through the Status bar. 3. Find and replace mistakes, correct grammar, and correct spelling errors. Chapter 4

  9. Managing the Media and Impressing the Press • Eight Keys to Dynamic Digital Communication • Message and Purpose • Audience and Impact • Boundaries and Guidelines • Research, Take Notes, and Plan • Create from General to Specific • Readability and Accessibility • Style and Visual Appeal • Proofing and Accuracy • A media kit is: • Like a fact sheet in which information is shared concisely and accurately about a product or service. • Helpful to the media and press professionals and can be viewed both online or in print. Chapter 5

  10. Boundaries & Guidelines: The Status Bar • The Status bar is the perfect tool for: • Finding and replacing mistaken words. • Counting characters, words, lines, and paragraphs. • Viewing documents in a variety of ways. • Proofing and editing spelling and grammar. Chapter 5

  11. Proofing & Accuracy: Check Spelling and Grammar • Misspellings are marked with a wavy red underlines. • Grammatical errors appear with wavy green or blue lines: green indicate potential structural mistakes and blue can indicate homonymerrors. • Options for checking and fixing mistakes: • Choose the Spelling & Grammar button from the Quick Access Toolbar. • Right-click on any misspelled word. • Choose the Review tab, and select Spelling & Grammar. • Choose the Proofing button on the Status bar. Chapter 5

  12. Lesson 5-3 Format with the Ribbon and mini toolbar In this Lesson You Will: 1. Apply case and alignment formatting. 2. Adjust spacing. 3. Copy and paste text, formats, and styles. Chapter 4

  13. Use the Home Tab’s Formatting and Accessibility Tools Clipboard group Font group Styles group Editing group Paragraph group • Formatting is the artful arrangement, layout, and design of a document. • The Format Painter allows you to copy and paste formats from one selection of text to another. Chapter 5

  14. Make a Strong Visual Presentation • Case refers to the capitalization of a word. • UPPERCASE capitalizes each letter or character and is used for titles and main headings. • Sentence case capitalizes the first word of each sentence. • lowercase removes all capitalization. • tOGGLEcASEcapitalizes all but the initial letters of each word. Chapter 5

  15. Center, Align, and Justify Text to the Margins • Margins are the unprinted area surrounding a document • Align Left: Text lines up straight (flush) along the left margin but is jagged on the right margin. • Align Right: Text lines up flush along the right margin but is jagged on the left margin. • Justify: Text lines up flush against both the left and right margins. Spacing between words is averaged across the line. • Center: Text is placed exactly mid-way between the margins. Chapter 5

  16. Bulleted Lists • Bulleted lists help organize specific details in an accessible and easy-to-read manner. • Bullets can be: • check marks • diamonds • symbols of many kinds Chapter 5

  17. Apply Styles to Your Media Kit • Styles are fun ways to liven up plain text documents. • Styles define how the various parts of the document should look. • Styles can be enhanced by applying different color schemes. • A color scheme is a set of complementary and contrasting colors that look good together. Chapter 5

  18. Heading Styles Chapter 5

  19. Lesson 5-4 Format Business documents In this Lesson You Will: 1. Apply case and alignment formatting. 2. Adjust spacing. 3. Copy and paste text, formats, and styles. Chapter 4

  20. Memorable Memos • Memos can be used for: • Announcements • Requests • Short reports • Handouts for meetings • A simple letter style. • The memo format gave birth to today’s e-mail message. Chapter 5

  21. Formatted Memo Chapter 5

  22. What Happens when a Memo Falls short Chapter 5

  23. Fixing the Memo With the Insert Date feature, the date will automatically be updated by the computer every time the document is opened. Chapter 5

  24. Numbered Lists • A numbered list is used instead of a bulleted list: • When prioritizing items. • For step-by-step items. • When items are to be completed in a specific chronological order. • Numbered lists: • Are visually appealing. • Provide easy access to information. • Make detailed information more readable. • Can have subordinate levels that provide more specific details for the general items in a list. Chapter 5

  25. Set Tab Markers on the Ruler • Tab markers can be used to add specific details without cluttering up a page. • Tab markers allow data to be organized in columns. Chapter 5

  26. Adding a Watermark • A watermark is a shadowy word or phrase that appears behind your document. Chapter 5

  27. Lesson 5-5 Correct and Format Business Documents • In this Lesson You Will: • 1. Interpret and apply proofreader marks. • 2. Apply the following letter formats: • • Block with mixed punctuation • • Modified block with mixed punctuation • • Block with open punctuation • 3. Address and attach an envelope to a letter. Chapter 4

  28. Accuracy Matters • Mistakes can create doubt in the minds of your audience members. • Readers may think that if your presentation is less than professional, perhaps the information you are presenting is inaccurate or unimportant. • You may have the best ideas in the world, but without proper formatting and proofing, your message may be lost. Chapter 5

  29. Collaboration Tools and Proofreader Marks Chapter 5

  30. Making Corrections to Correspondence Chapter 5

  31. Long Live the LEtter • Letters of introduction for résumés and applications • Letters of acceptance • Letters of announcement • Letters of appreciation • Letters of follow-up • Letters of collection for payment • Letters of complaint • Letters reporting progress • Letters of sympathy • Letters of resignation • Correspondence once applied primarily to letter writing. • Today, correspondence has expanded to include a variety of electronic media. • Samples of important types of letters include: Chapter 5

  32. You Can Format It Chapter 5

  33. Modified Block Style • In a modified block style letter, the left tab marker is placed directly on the centerline located 3 1⁄4 inches from the left margin. • Some parts of the letter (including the date, address block, and complimentary close) are keyed to the right of the centerline. Chapter 5

  34. Address an Envelope Chapter 5

  35. Block Style Letter with Open Punctuation • Open punctuation means the colon after the salutation and the comma after the complimentary close are removed. • This format is popular for: • Less formal occasions. • When a letter is meant for people inside rather than outside a company. Chapter 5

  36. Lesson 5-6 Build Informative Tables In this Lesson You Will: 1. Learn to create and improve tables with colors, shading, and symbols. 2. Use the table style gallery. 3. Learn about agendas and use tables to create them. Chapter 4

  37. Terrific Tables • Tables are organized by columns and rows. • Where columns and rows meet, cells are created. • The lines marking columns and rows are called gridlines. • Columns are usually referenced with letters (A, B, C, etc.) and rows with numbers (1, 2, 3, etc.). Chapter 5

  38. Improve your Tables Chapter 5

  39. Complex Tables Chapter 5

  40. Colors, Shading, and Symbols Chapter 5

  41. Symbols and Borders Chapter 5

  42. Advance Your Agenda • Agendas are created to help organize meetings, events, and groups of people. • They help participants stay on topic and move along to all of the important items. • A well-organized agenda will “drive a meeting” to meet its goals. • An agenda is a strong message to meeting participants that they need to stick to the purpose, goals, and topics of the meeting. Chapter 5

More Related