1 semester, 1/2 credit, Grades 9 - 12 This course will emphasize improving alphabetic as well as numeric
keyboarding skills required for efficient computer use by high schools, colleges, and business alike.
Not exact matches
These days it's not enough just to be willing to work hard — even entry - level jobs
require a certain basic
skill set, and because many jobs involve the use of computers and
keyboards, typing is one of those basic
skills.
New educational reforms are even putting
keyboarding on the list of
required skills for students as young as 8 and 9 years old.
Computerized and online assessments, educators are discovering, will
require kids to have certain digital
skills: using a mouse, highlighting text, dropping and dragging text, drawing lines and creating graphs on a screen, operating an online calculator, using scroll bars (the «bubble in the straw»), and
keyboarding, to name a few.
Third, students need to be proficient with the foundational
skills required to translate ideas into written text, such as handwriting /
keyboarding, vocabulary, spelling, and sentence construction.
What's worrisome is that some students won't have
keyboarding skills for a computer - based test,
requiring manipulation of figures using a... Read More
What's worrisome is that some students won't have
keyboarding skills for a computer - based test,
requiring manipulation of figures using a mouse and written answers, to show what actually they do know.
Tablets
require very little
skill on the part of the child to operate — not so, for example, with a desktop PC in which the user has to manipulate the mouse and
keyboard — and most children's app book content offers read - aloud narration that synchronizes with the highlighted text.
Shame shame shame for those people who have to use
keyboard / mouse because they don't have the
skill to aim with the controller, so they resort to an alternative which
requires much less
skill.
Dark Souls III isn't a game that I think lends itself to using a mouse and
keyboard, especially not with the added complexity of weapon
skills that
require even more button combinations.
There are many different dual types that
require all sorts of
keyboard skills, some examples are: «Quick Draw» which involves hitting the «Z» key faster than the enemy, «Pursuit» which is a DDR type of arrow key mashing, and «Struggle» where you mash the left and right arrow keys as fast as your finger will allow.
Excellent
keyboarding and typing
skills required.
Keyboard skills and a knowledge of general office procedures
required.
Computer or
keyboarding skills are often
required, as many offices use electronic scheduling systems and patient records.
Some schools may
require passing grades in proficiency exams that test
keyboard and English language
skills.