01 Introducing Word
Difficulty Level: Beginner
Word Version: XP
Assumed Knowledge: None
The aim of the tutorial is to:
Word is a useful programme to use if you want to create documents that include lots of, believe it or not, words! The programme allows you to easily create new documents and save them, adjust the text and lay it out on the page to your liking, amend and correct the words and move them around, ensure that the spelling and grammar of your documents are correct, include lists, graphics and tables, prepare web pages, and much, much more!
Opening up Word
To access Word click on Start at the bottom of left of the screen. On the pop-up menu click on All Programmes and on the next pop-up menu click on Microsoft Word. Alternatively, if you can see a Microsoft Word icon on the desktop click on it.
When you open up Word for the first time the screen layout should look like this:

Have a good look at the screen layout.
At the top is a blue bar. At the left end of the blue bar you will see that you have opened Document 1 in Microsoft Word. At the right end of the blue bar you will see three small boxes with pictures in them.
The first box is the minimize button. This allows you to shrink the Word window so that it appears as a small oblong at the bottom of the screen, but the document is not closed. A minimized document can be restored to a larger size by clicking on the small oblong (at the bottom of the screen).
The second box is the restore button. This allows you to restore the Word window to its previous size.
The third box (marked with an X) is the close box. This allows you to close the Word window including any open documents.
Using Pop-down menus
Underneath the blue bar is what's called the menu bar:
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Each word on this bar is the name of a pop-down menu. When you click on any of these words the menu will pop-down on the screen. The menus in Word sometimes display only the commands recently used.
To view ALL the available commands in a menu:

Or
To customizing the pop-down menus so they ALWAYS show ALL the commands:

Underneath the menu bar are two more bars that spread across the screen. The first one is the Standard toolbar and the one underneath is the Formatting toolbar. You can learn more about these toolbars in the handouts Documents and Folders, Taking Charge of Your Text, Formatting Your Text 1 and Formatting Your Text 2.
Shortcut Menus
Shortcut menus are slightly different to pop-down menus. They allow you to access various Word commands faster than using the options on the menu bar. Most of the time when you use the mouse you will click the left button. Shortcut menus only display the options that can be applied to the item that is right-clicked. This facility can save you time because you wont have to search through all the menu options in the menu bar until you find the command you are looking for.
To open up a shortcut menu:

Understanding Toolbars and how they work
A Toolbar is a bar a bit like the menu bar at the top of the screen. Each toolbar contains shortcut buttons for tools that fit into the theme of the bar. If you click on View in the menu bar and then highlight Toolbars a list of available toolbars will appear. The illustration below shows what you will see if you do this.

The above illustration shows a tick beside two particular toolbars which means that the Standard and Formatting toolbars will appear on the screen. As you are a beginner to Word I would recommend that you always have these two toolbars visible on the screen.
To add and remove a toolbar from the screen:
Exercises