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Recommend literature for learning a computer from scratch
I have a student at the age of 96, I teach him how to use a computer. The purpose of the training is to learn how to print documents in a text editor and use e-mail.
He sees a computer for the first time, but his motivation is amazing. During his life he wrote 2 books, a huge number of scientific papers, and is not going to stop.
I need a book that will describe in simple language (for children?) the general principles of the computer and the general principles of working in Windows. Unfortunately, I cannot give this information myself because of the partial hearing loss of the student, and he reads books perfectly.
Also, I would be grateful for any hint on the methods of working with the elderly.
Thank you!
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Many years ago, I started with the book by A. Levin "Tutorial for working on a computer." The same book allowed many severe accountant aunts to start working at a computer at a respectable age.
One of the oldest domestic tutorials, constantly updated. In the 1st edition, I remember, there was training in the wisdom of MS-DOS and Win 3.1. The 10th edition already covers Vista.
Check out the books in the Quick Start series. For example: Komyagin V. B., Kotsyubinsky A. O. “Modern self-instruction manual for working on a computer. Quick start”, Kotsiubinsky A.O., Groshev S.V. “Modern tutorial for working on the Internet. Fast start". Repeatedly gave people to learn from them, like successfully.
If you haven’t seen this topic It’s time for the elderly to learn , then I would recommend contacting Dasha, I think that she will not refuse to help, because you have one goal. Perhaps you will get some materials, and most importantly, you will learn the intricacies of working with people of age.
- What is your level?
- Well, I'm not a master .., let's start from scratch; zero level (one cartoon)
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In my opinion, in this case, any book for novice users (from the series “For Dummies” or “Getting Started with a Computer / Windows / Linux) is suitable + show visually (mouse movement, shortcuts, windows, text editor, browser, hyperlinks). You can video tutorials, say.
It's hard to advise something, but I think that a computer science textbook for elementary grades is also suitable. I would go to the store and buy a couple of books for beginners, which the seller would recommend, preferably with the student, for him to choose.
In any case, a visual demonstration decides what and how. If the goal only learns to print in Word and send / receive mail, then you can do it without books.
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