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I ned as much information as i could get. about Microsoft offices and all the other such as exel, word, access.

2006-11-30 09:11:17 · 2 answers · asked by Nandez 1 in Education & Reference Teaching

2 answers

I taught that information at Texas Tech University as an Undergraduate TA in the late 90's. Your question is too broad and can only result in a broad answer: read the Microsoft manuals on this, pickup up the "For Dummies" books, etc.

However, examples of things we chose to go over in class: how the interface worked (dragging/dropping, cutting/pasting, menu operation, saving, etc); how to create a basic document (formatting, expressions, objects, spell check, etc); VBA (macros).

Hope that helps give you some direction.

2006-11-30 09:28:50 · answer #1 · answered by narrfool 3 · 0 0

Firstly, it is Microsoft Office - not offices.

Microsoft offers a suite of programs. For example some suites include Microsoft Word (word processing), and others don't. It depends on whether you want to pay for the entire suite - or just some of it.

It is bundled different ways.

Some software, such as Microsoft Word, can be learned in a matter of hours. Some software, such as Excel, might take days or even weeks to learn.

I certainly woudn't want to try and lecture on all the programs, although I've used all of them since they existed. If I had to "lecture" on these software programs I'd try to be an expert on a few - and go with that.

2006-11-30 09:48:24 · answer #2 · answered by CC 4 · 0 0

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