You've just completed Word: Editing a Document — and you should be proud. Selecting, formatting, copy/paste, undo: those are the everyday tools real grown-ups use to write real stuff. Now you've got them.
Time to show off. Here's your certificate:
Now Comes the Fun Part — Practice
Open Word and write something real. A letter, a list, a recipe, anything. Then start playing: bold a word, change a font size, copy a sentence and paste it somewhere else, hit Ctrl+Z when you don't like what happened. The shortcuts don't stick until your fingers use them — so use them.
When You're Ready, Take the Next One
Editing without saving is just typing into thin air. The Saving course wraps up the trio — and if you haven't taken Starting a New Document yet, that one's even shorter.
Word: Saving a Document
Save vs Save As, where files go, file names that make sense, OneDrive vs your computer, file formats (.docx vs PDF), and auto-recovery in case Word crashes.
Start the Saving course →
Word: Starting a New Document
Three ways to start a new doc, when to pick blank vs a template, and where Word hides its hundreds of built-in templates (resume, calendar, flyer, invoice).
Start the New Document course →
One More Favor
If this course helped, the kindest thing you can do is leave us a quick Google Review. It tells other folks the courses are worth their time.
Click here to leave a review →
Stuck on something specific?
If Word is acting weird, you can't find a button, or something just isn't clicking — drop by Skits' Office and ask. I'm happy to help. Or if it's bigger than a quick question, talk to Jerry — he does on-site tutoring for individuals or groups, exactly this kind of thing.