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{{Info|2=Rationale|1=Mastering capitalization is the most difficult part of learning touch typing. Therefore extra effort must be spend on these lessons.}} | {{Info|2=Rationale|1=Mastering capitalization is the most difficult part of learning touch typing. Therefore extra effort must be spend on these lessons.}} | ||
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| + | ; Cover the complete keyboard layout: This includes characters and symbols accessibly via additional modifiers. Ideally every character, number and symbol which is printed on a real keyboard should be covered. | ||
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| + | {{Info|2=Rationale|1=This keeps the course interesting for already advanced typists.}} | ||
== Lessons == | == Lessons == | ||
A course is a ordered set of lessons. To be efficient for learning touch typing the content of the course should meet a few requirements.
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| Those eight keys are the start position of each finger. One must internalize the location of these keys first to successfully learn touch typing. |
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| If more keys are introduced the trainee might get overwhelmed by the difficulty of the lesson and loose his motivation. Introduce keys for important keys for the ability to form real words earlier. |
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| If the trainee passes a lesson he should have mastered the new keys. This is only possible if the lesson contains a significant amount of the new characters. |
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| Such lessons help to strengthen the acquired skills and and provide a way to check the overall training level. They are also better suited for repeated training to further improve one's general typing skills. |
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| Mastering capitalization is the most difficult part of learning touch typing. Therefore extra effort must be spend on these lessons. |
| Rationale |
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| This keeps the course interesting for already advanced typists. |
| Rationale |
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| Good titles make it easier to find the right course if one wants to train something specific. |
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| Training with real words and sentences is more effective than with arbitrary random character combinations since it that is closer to real typing usage. And it is more fun. |
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| Random character combinations are hard to type and are seldom found in day-to-day typing. Misspelled words on the other hand are confusing and have even a negative learning value, since the trainee may memorize the wrong spelling. |
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| Keeping within this range ensures that a untrained typist (~120 characters per minute) can finish a lesson in five to ten minutes. Longer lessons get frustrating, shorter ones are ineffective. |