csis1/16wk-week-04-06-word.md

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Weeks 46: Word Processing (Microsoft Word)

Hours: 6 (3 lectures)


Learning Objectives

  • Create, save, and open Word documents
  • Format text (fonts, sizes, styles, colors, alignment)
  • Use paragraph formatting (spacing, indentation, lists)
  • Insert and format images, tables, and other objects
  • Use headers/footers, page numbers, and page layout settings
  • Use spelling/grammar check, Find & Replace
  • Print and export documents (PDF)

Lecture 4: Creating a Document

Key Concepts

The Word Interface

  • Ribbon: Tabbed toolbar at the top (Home, Insert, Design, Layout, etc.)
  • Quick Access Toolbar: Customizable shortcuts (Save, Undo, Redo)
  • Ruler: Shows margins and tab stops
  • Status Bar: Word count, page number, zoom
  • Views: Print Layout (default), Read Mode, Web Layout

💡 Teaching idea: Do a "ribbon tour" — click through each tab and briefly show what lives there. Students follow along. This builds familiarity without memorizing.

Creating & Saving

  • New blank document vs templates
  • Save (Ctrl+S) vs Save As (new name/location/format)
  • File formats: .docx (default), .pdf, .txt, .rtf
  • AutoSave with OneDrive — explain what it is and when it helps
  • File naming conventions: descriptive, no special characters, include date if versioning

Entering & Selecting Text

  • Typing, Enter for new paragraph (not new line — Shift+Enter for line break)
  • Selection techniques:
    • Click and drag
    • Double-click = select word
    • Triple-click = select paragraph
    • Ctrl+A = select all
  • Cut (Ctrl+X), Copy (Ctrl+C), Paste (Ctrl+V)
  • Undo (Ctrl+Z) and Redo (Ctrl+Y) — "your best friends"

💡 Common student mistake: Pressing Enter multiple times to create space instead of using paragraph spacing. Address this early.

Diagram Ideas

  1. Word Interface Labeled Screenshot — Annotated screenshot with callouts for Ribbon, Quick Access Toolbar, Ruler, Status Bar, Document Area.
  2. Save vs Save As Flowchart — "First time saving?" → Save As. "Already saved and just updating?" → Save.

Slide Concepts

Slide Content
1 Title: "Getting Started with Word"
2 The Word Interface — labeled screenshot
3 Creating & Saving — Save vs Save As, file formats
4 Typing Tips — Enter vs Shift+Enter, selection shortcuts
5 Essential Shortcuts — table of Ctrl+S, C, V, X, Z, Y
6 Live Demo: Create a document from scratch

Lecture 5: Formatting a Document

Key Concepts

Character Formatting (Home Tab → Font Group)

  • Font family: serif (Times New Roman) vs sans-serif (Calibri, Arial)
  • Font size: measured in points (12pt standard for body text)
  • Bold (Ctrl+B), Italic (Ctrl+I), Underline (Ctrl+U)
  • Font color, highlight, text effects
  • Strikethrough, superscript, subscript
  • Format Painter (paintbrush icon) — copy formatting from one selection to another

💡 Design tip: Limit to 2 fonts per document (one for headings, one for body). This is a real-world design principle worth teaching early.

Paragraph Formatting (Home Tab → Paragraph Group)

  • Alignment: Left, Center, Right, Justify
  • Line spacing: Single, 1.5, Double (and custom)
  • Paragraph spacing: Space Before / Space After (use this instead of extra Enter keys!)
  • Indentation: First line indent, hanging indent
  • Bullets and numbering — and how to customize them
  • Borders and shading

Styles

  • Pre-built formatting combinations (Heading 1, Heading 2, Normal, etc.)
  • Why styles matter: consistency, easy changes, accessibility, and they power the Table of Contents
  • Modify existing styles or create custom ones

💡 Teaching idea: Give students an ugly, inconsistently formatted document. Have them fix it using ONLY styles (no manual formatting). Teaches the "right way" from the start.

Page Layout (Layout Tab)

  • Margins (Normal, Narrow, Wide, Custom)
  • Orientation: Portrait vs Landscape
  • Paper size (Letter = 8.5" × 11")
  • Columns (for newsletters, brochures)
  • Page breaks vs section breaks

Diagram Ideas

  1. Serif vs Sans-Serif — Side-by-side examples with the serifs highlighted/circled.
  2. Paragraph Spacing Visual — Show the difference between "extra Enter keys" vs proper paragraph spacing.
  3. Styles Cascade — Heading 1 → Heading 2 → Heading 3 → Normal body text, showing the visual hierarchy.
  4. Margin Diagram — Page outline showing top, bottom, left, right margins with measurements.

Slide Concepts

Slide Content
1 Title: "Making It Look Good"
2 Font Basics — serif vs sans-serif, sizes, "2-font rule"
3 Bold, Italic, Underline — when to use each
4 Format Painter — demo
5 Paragraph Formatting — alignment, spacing, indentation
6 "Stop Pressing Enter!" — before/after of paragraph spacing
7 Styles — why they exist, how to use them
8 Page Layout — margins, orientation, columns
9 Activity: Fix the Ugly Document

Lecture 6: Finalizing a Document

Key Concepts

Inserting Objects

  • Images: Insert → Pictures (from file, online, stock). Resize, crop, text wrapping (inline, square, tight, behind text).
  • Tables: Insert → Table. Add/delete rows and columns. Merge cells. Table styles.
  • Shapes & Text Boxes: For callouts, diagrams, pull quotes.
  • Headers & Footers: Consistent info on every page (name, date, page number).
  • Page Numbers: Insert → Page Number (top, bottom, current position).
  • Hyperlinks: Link to websites, other documents, or places in the same document.

Proofing & Review

  • Spelling & Grammar Check: Review tab or red/blue squiggly lines. Right-click for suggestions.
  • Find & Replace (Ctrl+H): Powerful — can replace text, formatting, special characters.
  • Word Count: Status bar or Review → Word Count.
  • Thesaurus: Right-click a word → Synonyms.
  • Comments: Review → New Comment. For collaboration/feedback.
  • Track Changes: Shows edits made by collaborators. Accept/Reject changes.

Printing & Exporting

  • Print Preview (Ctrl+P) — always preview before printing!
  • Print settings: pages, copies, double-sided, collate
  • Export to PDF: File → Save As → PDF, or File → Export
  • Why PDF? Looks the same everywhere, can't be easily edited, professional standard.

💡 Teaching idea: Have students peer-review each other's documents using Track Changes and Comments. Teaches the tool AND the skill of giving constructive feedback.

Diagram Ideas

  1. Text Wrapping Options — Same image shown with different wrapping styles (inline, square, tight, behind text) to show the visual difference.
  2. Track Changes Example — Before/after showing insertions (underlined color), deletions (strikethrough), and comments.
  3. Print Preview Checklist — Visual checklist: margins correct? Page breaks in right places? Headers/footers showing? Images not cut off?

Slide Concepts

Slide Content
1 Title: "Finishing Touches"
2 Inserting Images — resize, crop, text wrapping
3 Tables — creating, formatting, when to use them
4 Headers, Footers, Page Numbers
5 Spelling & Grammar — demo of proofing tools
6 Find & Replace — live demo with a real example
7 Track Changes & Comments — collaboration demo
8 Exporting to PDF — why and how
9 Print Preview Checklist

Vocabulary

Term Definition
Ribbon The tabbed toolbar at the top of the Word window containing commands organized by function
Quick Access Toolbar Small customizable toolbar above the Ribbon for frequently used commands
Font A set of characters with a consistent design (e.g., Calibri, Times New Roman)
Serif Small decorative strokes at the ends of letter strokes (e.g., Times New Roman)
Sans-serif Fonts without serifs; clean, modern look (e.g., Arial, Calibri)
Point (pt) Unit of font size measurement; 72 points = 1 inch
Format Painter Tool that copies formatting from one selection and applies it to another
Style A named set of formatting attributes that can be applied to text for consistency
Line Spacing The vertical distance between lines of text within a paragraph
Paragraph Spacing Space added before or after a paragraph (measured in points)
Indentation The distance text is offset from the margin (first line, hanging, left, right)
Margin The blank space between the edge of the page and the document content
Orientation Page direction: Portrait (tall) or Landscape (wide)
Text Wrapping How text flows around an inserted image or object
Header / Footer Content that appears at the top/bottom of every page
Find & Replace Tool to search for text (or formatting) and replace it throughout a document
Track Changes Feature that marks all edits so they can be reviewed, accepted, or rejected
PDF Portable Document Format; preserves exact layout across all devices and platforms
Template A pre-designed document with placeholder content and formatting
AutoSave Automatic saving feature when working with OneDrive/SharePoint

Activities & Assignments

In-Class

  1. Ribbon Scavenger Hunt: List of 15 features (e.g., "Where do you insert a table?" "Where is double spacing?"). Students race to find each one.
  2. Fix the Ugly Document: Provide a poorly formatted document. Students apply styles, fix spacing, add headers/footers, and export to PDF.
  3. Peer Review with Track Changes: Students swap documents and use Track Changes + Comments to review each other's work.

Homework / Projects

  1. Professional Letter: Write a formal business letter using proper formatting: block style, appropriate font, date, addresses, salutation, body, closing. Export as PDF.
  2. Newsletter or Flyer: Create a one-page document using columns, images, text wrapping, a table, and at least 3 different styles. Must include a header with a title and page border or shading.
  3. Resume Draft: Create a basic resume using tables or tabs for alignment, consistent styles, and appropriate formatting. This is a real-world artifact they can keep.

Discussion Questions

  1. Why does Microsoft default to Calibri (a sans-serif font) instead of Times New Roman?
  2. When would you use Track Changes vs just editing directly?
  3. Why should you export important documents as PDF instead of sending the .docx?
  4. What's the difference between pressing Enter and using paragraph spacing? Why does it matter?