franksingleton
Well-Known Member
I am looking for advice/experienc on a touch typing package for 9+ year olds?
I, too, use hunt and peck but find that my typing speed matches quite well my speed of composition so not too much time lost. It would be a different matter if I was copy typing.A very good idea, I use the 'hunt and peck' method but the ability to touch type would have saved me hours or days when I was working. Every child should learn although eventually speech recognition will take over.
Mavis Beacon teaches typing ,was in CD format,as I remember.
I think it was .exe
Look for the US army syllabus. They did extensive research and nailed it. 6 wk intensive course.
NB they need to keep using it for a year to get it locked in.
In the 80s I proposed to a group of senior educationists that we remove joined up writing and copperplate from the school syllabus and replace it with touch typing. I was screamed at ! I guess an idea before it's time.
Most kids I see can type very rapidly using just their thumbs...
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Some children get classified as slow learners because of writing problems - I was marginal, my elder son another and one of our older grandchildren in the US was also in that category. His school identified the problem early after the family went to the US. They gave him a laptop and at the age of 9 he got a touch typing package. He was a techno buff even then. Now, in his mid 20s he works in San Francisco as a consultant in a top rate software house.
Our two youngest grandchildren are 9 and 11. They are becoming computer literate. I want them to be able to use computers properly. Hence my request for an appropriate touch typing package.
They gave him a laptop and at the age of 9 he got a touch typing package. He was a techno buff even then. Now, in his mid 20s he works in San Francisco as a consultant in a top rate software house.
As a software engineer, the idea that typing skills have anything to do with programming ability is baffling to me.
At best there is a slight correlation, purely because we do spend a lot of time in front of a keyboard, but no more so than for, say, Harry Potter fanfic writers or people who spend all their time on cookery forums.
Your grandson obviously had the necessary aptitude and interest for software development; giving him a laptop may well have helped fuel that interest. But the typing software on it? Nope.
Pete
Handwriting pen please, not biro! :encouragement:Personally at that age I would give him a biro & hide his calculator.
As a software engineer, the idea that typing skills have anything to do with programming ability is baffling to me.
At best there is a slight correlation, purely because we do spend a lot of time in front of a keyboard, but no more so than for, say, Harry Potter fanfic writers or people who spend all their time on cookery forums.
Your grandson obviously had the necessary aptitude and interest for software development; giving him a laptop may well have helped fuel that interest. But the typing software on it? Nope.
Pete