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Keyboard skill—a useful business accompaniment

B.W. Canning (President of the Society of Commercial Teachers and lately Head of Secretarial Science Section, Sir Isaac Pitman & Sons Ltd.)

Education + Training

ISSN: 0040-0912

Article publication date: 1 October 1975

42

Abstract

The number of people who, one way or another, continue to learn how to operate a typewriter is undoubtedly rising every year. For one person who will learn it as a livelihood‐earning skill, there are four or five who acquire some measure of ability in order to use the typewriter for their own social or semi‐professional purposes — club secretaries, business men, journalists, police, clerks, local government officers, civil servants, medical receptionists, authors, and so on, in addition to the ‘average man’ — or, more usually, the ‘average woman’ — who uses it solely for personal purposes.

Citation

Canning, B.W. (1975), "Keyboard skill—a useful business accompaniment", Education + Training, Vol. 17 No. 10, pp. 277-278. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb016409

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1975, MCB UP Limited

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