Course
Description:
While developing English language
skills, this course introduces students to Lotus 1-2-3, including Lotus concepts, features,
functions, and applications.
Objectives: By the end of the course, students
should be able:
Instructional
Methods: Classes
include language development and critical thinking sessions followed by
hands-on practice and drills. Students
will complete periodic summary exercises that require application of all skills
learned to date. Each student will
create a portfolio of finished output.
Grading: The final grade is based on the following:
|
Class Participation |
25% |
|
Assignments |
50% |
|
Exams |
25% |
|
Total |
100% |
The
grading scale is: A=90-100%, B+=85-89%,
B=80-84%, C+=75-79%, C=70-74%, D=65-69%, F=60-64%.
|
Week |
Topics |
Assignments and Tests |
|
1-2 |
Mapping
the text and course: introduction to
the course and the book, including learning aids Lotus
basics: the Lotus 1-2-3 and Windows
screens, Lotus templates, menu items and commands, dialog boxes, setting view
preferences, changing screen display, getting help, etc. Exploring
the worksheet. Ordinal
transition words in giving directions.
|
Lesson
1 reading. Lesson
1 exercises. Turn
any list of 5 or more sequential directions in the text into a paragraph,
using numerical transition words: first,
second, third, etc. |
|
3-5 |
Using
the worksheet: exploring the worksheet
using directional and express keys, labels and values, corrections,
saving/closing a file, exiting, printing Using
formulas and functions Inserting
and moving columns and rows. Advanced
functions. More
transition words in giving directions. Oral
practice interpreting spreadsheets. |
Lesson
3-7 reading. Exercises
4-54. Turn
any list of 4 or more sequential directions from the chapter into a
paragraph, making use of some or all of the following transition words: first, next, then, after, last. In
a paragraph or more, describe what the spreadsheet in exercise 23 tells
you. In
a paragraph or more, explain which country would offer the best price for
Heavy Metals Import Company, based on the spreadsheet information. |
|
6-7 |
Creating
and graphs: using titles and legends,
printing graphs, graph settings Oral
practice interpreting graphs. |
Lesson
8 reading. Exercises
54-64. Pick
one of the graphs in exercise 58 and explain what it tells you. Develop
a spreadsheet that tracks one of your weekly or monthly costs (e.g., for
food, for telephone, for electricity, etc.).
Then display the results in a graph |
|
8-9 |
Worksheet
enhancements: changing fonts,
typestyles, shading/patterns/colors, lines/shadows/boxes, frames and grids,
printing/compression and landscape, using graphics, and adding paragraph
text. Review
for exam, week 8. |
Lesson
9 reading. Exercises
65-74. Explain
how you enhanced the Sigma and Company's worksheet in exercise 74. Exam,
week 8. |
|
10-11 |
Using
simple database functions: creating,
sorting, querying, calculating |
Lesson
10 reading. Exercises
75-86. Explain
how you organized the transaction data for Noah Auto Sales by describing the
parts of your spreadsheet for exercise 86. |
|
12-13 |
Using
simple macros: creating, naming,
running, stepping/debugging, editing, and hiding |
Lesson
11 reading. Exercises
87-90. In
a paragraph or more, describe how you updated the OWN worksheet in exercise
89. Summarize
the steps you took to prepare a weekly payroll for the Gingerbread Cookie
Company. |
|
14-16 |
Summary
applications: using spreadsheets in
accounting, economics, finance, marketing, math, sales, and science. Close
reading of problems from each discipline. Review
for exam, week 16. |
Lesson
12 reading. Exercises
91-97. Keep
a time log for a week. Develop a
spreadsheet that shows how you used your time. Then develop a graph with the same
data. Finally, write a paragraph
describing areas where you wasted time and areas where you saved time doing
something. Exam,
week 16. |
rev. 2/04, 2/07