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COURSE DESCRIPTION
With PowerPoint 2000, you use graphics, text, movies, sounds, and the Internet to share information
on any topic and make dynamic presentations. Using PowerPoint 2000 templates, you can quickly and easily
create presentations for many purposes, including lectures, research reports,
meeting handouts and agendas, speaker introductions, and flyers.
This course will help you create and organize presentations by
assisting in developing presentation outlines and selecting various slide
layouts. The tri-pane feature of PowerPoint 2000 allows you to view the slides,
outline, and notes simultaneously so that you can easily organize the
information you want to present in the slides.
Once you learn to use PowerPoint 2000, you can:
**Create presentations with the AutoContent Wizard.
**Add and delete slide from presentations.
**Customize a slide layout.
**Add notes.
**Use the Web to view presentations.
TAKING THIS COURSE
It is recommended
that you begin with the 1st lesson (Overview), and go
through each lesson in order as listed (ending with Putting It
Together).
ADVISORIES AND
NOTICES
This website is not a credit or certificate/degree granting program.
This content is freely available as an educational resource for
faculty, students, and self-learners.
**No instructor or moderator is present.
**This course was created
by Microsoft and is part of
Microsoft In Education
and may be taken/obtained on their website (click
here).
**Microsoft, Microsoft Office, Word, Excel, Access, PowerPoint and
Publisher are either registered trademarks or trademarks of
Microsoft Corporation in
the United States and/or other countries.
Click here to purchase Microsoft
Office.
BEFORE YOU BEGIN
Before you begin the
activities in this course, make sure that Microsoft PowerPoint 2000
has been installed on your computer and is operating
correctly.
CONVENTIONS
The procedures given in this
book use the following conventions:
Click means to use
the mouse to point to an area on the screen and press the left (primary)
mouse button, unless the right (secondary) mouse button is specified.
Commands are in bold type.
For example, click Next means to place the cursor over the Next
button and click.
Information you are to type
is in italics.
Some activities use
shortcut keys, which are keystroke combinations that help you use the
software more productively. The CTRL (for control) and the TAB
keys are examples of key names commonly used in shortcut keys. When the
directions specify CTRL+N, hold down the CTRL key, and
then press the N key.
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