Microsoft Publisher is a graphic design program which is developed by Microsoft. The Microsoft Publisher Masterclass course helps the candidates to create professional documents, web pages and marketing materials. This course provides essential knowledge and skills which are required to create different types of documents such as postcards, banners, greetings cards, newsletters and much more. During the one day course, delegates will learn how to create text, boxes, shapes and pictures, use ruler guidelines and insert headers and footers in Microsoft Publisher documents. After completion of the course, candidates will have more control over the presentation of their messages and also save on graphic design costs.
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Microsoft Publisher is a graphic design program which is developed by Microsoft. The Microsoft Publisher Masterclass course helps the candidates to create professional documents, web pages and marketing materials. This course provides essential knowledge and skills which are required to create different types of documents such as postcards, banners, greetings cards, newsletters and much more. During the one day course, delegates will learn how to create text, boxes, shapes and pictures, use ruler guidelines and insert headers and footers in Microsoft Publisher documents. After completion of the course, candidates will have more control over the presentation of their messages and also save on graphic design costs.
Easily integrate with MS Office Outlook
Apply Professional-level effects for texts, shapes and pictures
Explore Mail merge tools and Personalisation tools
Courses delivered by certified Microsoft instructors
Find out what's included in the training programme.
A dedicated tutor will be at your disposal throughout the training to guide you through any issues.
Delegates will get certification of completion at the end of the course.
Courseware will also be provided to the delegates so that they can revise the course after the training.
There are no formal prerequisites for the Microsoft Publisher Masterclass training course. However, delegates must be familiar with the Windows Environment and Microsoft applications such as PowerPoint, Word.
Microsoft Publisher Masterclass course is designed for those who want to create and publish their work using a variety of texts and images. These includes:
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Microsoft Publisher is a useful tool for personal and business publishing projects. Microsoft Publisher has an extensive collection of templates that provide an excellent way to start a new magazine. Publisher includes various inbuilt components with the help of which a user can design the documents having calendars, sidebars and borders in it. Microsoft Publisher is a publishing program that allows the users to create professional publications that include text, graphics, and images with precise layouts, format texts and paragraphs in the publication. Delegates will learn graphic design work and how to produce publications using images, colour and text. The course explains how to use publisher features for sharing publications on the web. At the end of this course, the delegates will use layouts and themes, add audio and video components in the presentations. Candidates will be able to perform the following tasks:
Publisher Essential Skills
Page Layout
Working with Text
Formatting Text
Formatting Shapes & Pictures
Master Pages, Headers & Footers
Printing
Techniques of Advanced Layout
Word Art
Editing
Working with Newsletters
Mail Merge
Microsoft Publisher Text Wrapping
Finalising Publications
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Reach us at 0121 368 7851 or info@msptraining.com for more information.
Sunderland is a coastal city lies at the mouth of the Wear River, around 80 meters above sea level. It is located in the centre of the City of Sunderland metropolitan borough, local government district in England with a population of around 174,286 according to 2011 census. It is situated about 10 miles southeast of Newcastle and 240 miles north of London. The River Wear flows through the centre of the town and divides in a deeply incised valley. The town’s name is originated from sundered land meaning land kept aside for a special purpose or land sundered. The evidence of three settlements found historically in a county in North East England or County Durham on the site of present-day Sunderland.
The area of Sunderland Monkwearmouth is located on the north bank of the Wear River and settled in 674 during the foundation of Jarrow Abbey by the Benedict Biscop. Another settlement Bishopwearmouth founded in 930, lies at the southern side of the river. The town developed as a port over a period and became famous for trading salt and coal. The construction of ships started on the river in the 14th century. With the passage of time, the port of the town absorbed Monkwearmouth and Bishopwearmouth by the 19th century. The town became the major centre for the automotive industry and the service sector. It has been suggested that the person who is born or lives in the town, sometimes known as Mackem. The concept came into existence in the late 20th century and not used until 1980.
History
The early inhabitants of the town were the hunter-gatherers during Stone Age. The remains of the period were found during the excavations of St Peter’s Church in Monkwearmouth including the artefacts and microliths. The area of Hastings Hill became a primary place of burial and central point of activity in the Neolithic period, the final phase of the Stone Age. In the pre and post-Roman period, the area was occupied by the Brigantes around the Wear River. During the Anglo-Saxon era, the town became an important centre of knowledge and learning and library with approximately 300 volumes was also located in the town.
The long trench, a tactic of warfare was found as one artefact of the English civil war. In the 17th century, the three original settlements (Monkwearmouth, Sunderland and Bishopwearmouth) were integrated and known as Sunderland-near-the-Sea. The factors behind the incorporation included the construction of ships on the banks of the river, salt panning and success of the port of Sunderland. The construction of Sunderland barracks was completed in 1794. These barracks included the 80-bed hospital, soldier’s quarters and housing for 1528 infantry troops. The second iron bridge of the world was built in the town in 1796.
The town was severally affected by the major Indian epidemic Cholera, broke out in the town in 1831. The disease spread in other parts of the country resulted in the death of more than 32000 people. The town again suffered from the worst disaster of the Victoria Hall in 1883 leading to the death of 183 children due to lack of enough way to pass during a variety show. This led to the invention of the concept of push bar emergency doors. The economy of the town shifted to chemical and motor manufacturing after the fall of heavy industries in the early 19th century. The electric tram system arrived in the town in 1900, later on, these were replaced by the buses in 1940.
The town saw remarkable expansion in the shipbuilding business during the First World War and became the prime target of a Zeppelin raid in 1916. Approx. 2500 citizens of the town served in the armed forces during the war period. The town also attacked by the German bombers during the Second World War leading to the destruction of 4000 homes and death of 267 people in the town. The coal mining and shipbuilding industry declined and ended by the late 20th century resulted in the unemployment of the local workforce.