Microsoft Word Masterclass

ABOUT THE PROGRAM

The Microsoft Word Masterclass training course is a beginner to an advanced level course designed to create complex and professional quality documents. The training introduces the delegates to the essentials of Word and the word processing application. The training will help the delegates to manage complex and lengthy documents in the business. Delegates will get an opportunity to enhance their Microsoft Word documenting skills using Microsoft Word, which is more beneficial to creating better documents.

  • Create different types of Word documents

  • Training is provided by the well- experienced trainers

  • Apply alignment techniques, page numbering and bullets

  • Learn about graphics components including SmartArt, image and shapes

WHAT'S INCLUDED ?

Find out what's included in the training programme.

Includes

Tutor Support

A dedicated tutor will be at your disposal throughout the training to guide you through any issues.

Includes

Certificate

Delegates will get certification of completion at the end of the course.

Includes

Courseware

Courseware will also be provided to the delegates so that they can revise the course after the training.

PREREQUISITES

There are no formal prerequisites hence everyone can attend the Microsoft Word Masterclass training.

TARGET AUDIENCE

The Microsoft Word Masterclass course is designed for those professionals who want to gain the knowledge of Microsoft Word to create and edit the professional documents.

WHAT WILL YOU LEARN?

  • Delegates will learn how to Insert header and footer
  • How to create a template
  • Learn about file tab and Ribbon
  • Candidates will learn about master and sub documents
  • About printing documents
  • How to create and edit tables
  • Learn how to add, edit and resize images

Enquire Program

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PROGRAM OVERVIEW

The Microsoft Word Masterclass training updates the delegate’s existing knowledge and skills by introducing new features of Microsoft Word. Throughout the training, delegates will able to create an effective Word document with the help of spell checking grammar, and they can check their mistakes before sharing the document with someone. The delegates also get to know how to create own buttons and menus. By the end of the training, candidates will be able to easily create, edit, format and print stunning Word documents.

 

 


PROGRAM CONTENT

Starting with Microsoft Word

About Microsoft Word

Open, close a word processing application

Creating a new Word document, selecting text, moving text, undoing and redoing, formatting text, and applying advanced text effects

Maximising the potential of your document

Navigating in your document

Working on your document

Receiving help with Microsoft Word

Creating Headers and Footers

Creating headers and footers

Inserting page numbers

Design ribbon by using the header and footer tools

Maximising the use of headers and footers

Working with Long Documents

Adding a table of contents

Updating and deleting a table of contents

Footnotes and endnotes

Inserting citations and a bibliography

Adding an index

Inserting a table of figures

Creating an outline

The New Ribbon Interface

Becoming acquainted with Microsoft Word

Defining ribbons

Ribbons and chunks

The home ribbon

Insert and view ribbon

The Advanced Ribbons

The page layout and references ribbon

Mailings ribbon

The contextual ribbons

Review and Collaborating on Word Documents with others

Adding comments to a document

Tracking changes

Viewing changes, comments and additions

Accepting and rejecting changes

Mail Merge in Microsoft Word

These are the steps to perform a mail merge in Microsoft Word Make a new document for a Mail merge

  • Perview mail merge
  • Printing mail merge
  • Send mail merge output to other users using email

Comparing and Combining Documents

Comparing documents

Combining documents

Printing and Viewing your document

How to use layouts and views

Basic viewing tools

Advanced viewing tools

Using print preview

Printing a document

Using page setup

Using Formatting Tools

Bullets and numbering

Using delineation tools and paragraph dialogue

Working with pages

Protecting Documents

Making the Word documents read-only

Removing metadata from files

Password protect Word documents

Restrict formatting and editing

Time Saving Tools

Language tools

Inserting pre-defined text

New Features as of 2013

Using the cloud

Resume reading feature

New Features in Word 2016

Ink equations

Version history

Shape formatting and sharing

Tips and Tricks

Downloading your document into other formats

Creating a contents page

Copying and pasting

Paragraph formatting

Inserting page breaks

Customising

Shortcuts

Microsoft Word Masterclass Enquiry

 

Enquire Now


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Reach us at 0121 368 7851 or info@msptraining.com for more information.

ABOUT Leeds

Which still Leeds derives it name from the old Brythonic word Ladenses that stands for  "people of the fast-flowing river". The river being mentioned here is the River Aire which still flows through Leeds. Originally Leeds referred to a forested area in the 5th to the 7th centuries.  The citizens of this city are known as Loiners. They are sometimes also reffered to as Leodensians which is derieved from the city’s Latin name. In Welsh, it is said to be derieved from the word Ilod which means “a place”.  Leeds has a population of 2.3 million.

As of today, Leeds economy is the most varied of all the UK's main employment centres. Jobs in Leeds have grown at a faster pace than elsewhere specially in the private-sector. Leeds stands third on the podium when it comes to jobs area. It had 480,000 in employment and self-employment at the start of 2015. Leeds is also ranked as a gamma world city by the Globalization and World Cities Research Network. It is also known as a hub of culture, finance, and commerce in the West Yorkshire Urban Area. There are four universities in Leeds – The University of Leeds, Leeds Beckett University, Leeds Trinity University and the University of Law. In the United Kingdom, the total number of students in Leeds stands at the fourth place.

Cinema in Leeds

First of all it was in the October of 1888 that Louis Le Prince using his single lens camera shot moving picture sequences known as the Roundhay Garden Scene and a Leeds Bridge street scene. These were developed on Eastman’s paper film. The film festival held at Leeds nowdays and called Leeds International Film Festivals International has a Short Film Competition that is named after Louis Le Prince. The second person to do so was Wordsworth Donisthorpe who like Prince had a strong connection to the Leeds Philosophical and Literary Society. Donisthorpe applied for a patent for his camera that could capture moving images twelve years earlier to Prince's.

Leeds has been known to host the rich film exhibitions now and then. Besides hosting the Leeds International Film Festival and Leeds Young Film Festival, it plays host to many independent cinemas and pop-up venues for screening films. The two movie houses -  Cottage Road Cinema and Hyde Park Picture House – have since the early 20th century been showing and are ranked among the oldest cinemas to do so in the whole of UK.

Culture

Leeds has been home to many artists such as Kenneth Armitage, John Atkinson Grimshaw, Jacob Kramer, Barbara Hepworth, Henry Moore and Edward Wadsworth, who belonged to diverse fields. The history of art exhibitions in Leeds goes far beyond the 1888 when the first art gallery opened in Leeds. A series of exhibitions termed as 'Polytechnic Exhibitions' were regularly held from 1839. Established in 1903 and lasting upto 1923 the Leeds Arts Club founded by Alfred Orage had members which included Jacob Kramer, Herbert Read, Frank Rutter and Michael Sadler. This club advocated the philosophy of Friedrich Nietzsche, and German Expressionist ideas about art and culture. Noted sculptors Barbara Hepworth and Henry Moore started their carrersr in the 1920’s at the Leeds College of Art.

The club acted as a centre for essential art education in the middle of the 20th century guided by artists such as Harry Thubron and Tom Hudson, and the art historian Norbert Lynton. In the 1970s the Leeds College of Art split from the college to form the center of the new multidisciplinary Leeds Polytechnic which later came to be known as Leeds Beckett University. The University of Leeds served as the alma mater of Herbert Read, one of the leading international theorists of modern art. It was also  the place where Marxist art historian Arnold Hauser taught from 1951 to 1985. Leeds acted as a centre for radical feminist art, with the Pavilion Gallery, which opened in 1983, showing the work of women. The University of Leeds School of Fine Art was another center dedicated to the development of feminist art history in the late 1980’s and 90’s.