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The Importance of Teaching ‘Traditional’ Typing Skills in 2015

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Even as technology continues to move forward, schools are discovering the value of looking backwards to older instructional methods that help teach students how to make the most of digital resources.

In the 21st century, where “bring your own device” and computer-based learning are common themes in education, many students are already familiar with using tablets and smartphones to communicate and access information. But do they know the best ways to use those devices to enhance learning? That’s one of the issues that teachers and administrators face in today’s modern classroom.

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Efficiency of Touch Screens vs. Touch Typing

Moving icons and words with the glide of a finger, taking advantage of predictive text algorithms that complete your words, using your thumbs to key in letters - all of these are familiar ways to use a digital device, whether that’s a laptop or a smartphone. By the time students reach grades where they’ll need to know how to click on the correct answer in an online exam, and to use the school’s virtual library and the internet to look up information on their own, they’re so used to this interface that they don’t even think about the alternative: the keyboard.

When it comes to efficiency and accuracy, touch-screen manipulation of text gets slower and less useful the longer the text becomes. Even the fastest thumb-key entry of words using a smartphone peaks at an average of 40wpm, a speed that is generally seen as the lowest baseline for touch typing. With only minimal instruction, any student can quickly learn to type using a standard QWERTY keyboard, reducing errors and increasing speed.

Students need to know how to use the keyboard to write their essays, reports, and papers, whether they’re submitted through the teacher’s home page or printed out to hand in for their grade. Over the course of one school year alone, students can save hours of typing time by learning to touch type. Without these essential keyboarding skills, many students risk falling behind in their classwork, something that will impact their performance throughout their school years and even affect their employability as adults.

Why Teach Typing in Schools?

Of course, typing skills aren’t something that has arisen only in the age of computers. Between the 1960s and the 1980s, most schools in the United States offered typing classes to students in junior high and high school, though generally not to students in lower grades. As computers became more a part of normal everyday life, schools began to assume that students were learning keyboarding on their own, at home. Unfortunately, this assumption has led to a situation where students are coming into their classrooms without the keyboarding abilities they need, and leaving the classroom equally unprepared for further educational or professional development.

Today, many schools are providing their students with basic computer and keyboard lessons much earlier than before. Now that computers are used in a range of classroom activities and lessons even in the second and third grade, the sooner a child learns to type, the better they’ll do in class. The most effective keyboarding programs are based on the fundamental principles of keyboarding that have been used since the introduction of typewriters, combined with the interactive and user-focused features made possible through today’s modern computer software and applications.

The Best Typing Tutor Software

When comparing keyboarding programs for classroom use, there are several things to keep in mind.

School districts and administrators who are looking for software that will teach the widest range of students with the least amount of extra work for teaching staff, and for the lowest cost, should consider a program like eReflect’s Typesy™. [3] This cloud-based software eliminates the need for onsite technical support, and the scientifically-designed keyboarding lessons are suitable for children as young as 7 years old while challenging and interesting enough for students through the high school grades. The experts on the development team have combined well-tested keyboarding principles with the latest in interactive technology and social networking to produce a system that has quickly become a favorite with students and teachers nationwide. To get more information about a trial version of the system contact the eReflect team.

Creative Commons licensed keyboard image source [2].

About Chassie Lee [8]

Chassie Lee is the Content Expert for eReflect – creator of Typesy [9], which is currently being used by tens of thousands of happy customers in over 110 countries.