Table of Contents

Using the Keyboard

This page is now an EAC mini-class, and has been made into an Open Office presentation.

It can be found in the Instructors Documents repository. Ask Nate, Anne, or Doug for more information.

The following information is “old”. Please send an email to info@bworks.org to request the Open Office presentation.

Summary

You will get more work done and have more fun working on the computer if you use “Touch Typing” rather than “Hunt and Peck”. When you train your fingers to type without looking at the keyboard, you can concentrate on what you're typing, rather than how to type it.

Keyboard History

Keyboards are one of the few components of a computer system that haven't changed much since they were invented. Many newer ways of entering data have been invented, such as speech-to-text, and touch-screens, but the computer keyboard has remained relatively unchanged in over 40 years of usage.

Keyboard Layout

Most keyboards have the QWERTY layout.

Finger Placement

Images courtesy of

Fingers should be placed on the keyboard in the position shown below.

Each finger has its own territory, and should only press keys in its territory.

Keyboard Layout

Pictures were copied from excellent tutorial found here:

http://www.ckls.org/~crippel/computerlab/tutorials/keyboard/page1.html

Top Row

Second Row

Third Row

Fourth Row

Fifth Row

Sixth Row

Navigation Keys

Number Keypad / Lights

The number keypad can be used to type numbers OR navigate.

Cursor

It's important to know where the computer will put what you type. Computers use a cursor to tell you where it will put the keys that you type. The cursor is usually a blinking vertical line or box on the screen. Anything you type will appear where the cursor is located.

Example 1: Cursor is at the start of the sentence in the example below.

Example 2: Cursor is at the end of the sentence in the example below.

See Also

Tips

Notes

Perhaps Notepad or some other basic editor should be used instead of Word.