Step One:Creating a Document |
- Open a word processing program and get a new page (File - New).
- Move it to the side of your screen by clicking and dragging on the gray
lines at the top of the document.
- Open your web browser and go to American Life Histories, 1936-1940.
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Step Two:Copying a Life History |
- Locate the life history you selected.
- On the browser toolbar, choose Edit - Select All to highlight the entire text of the life
history.
- Choose Edit - Copy to copy the life history.
- Find the word processing program on the side of the
screen and click on it to bring it forward.
- On the word processor toolbar, choose Edit - Paste. The life history should appear on the page.
- On the word processor toolbar, choose File - Save, then type your name plus the number of your class
period as the title and choose Save.
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Step Three:Creative Cutting |
Now you need to clean up and edit the Life
History until it is one page of text. You must read it to see what is most important to keep!
- Cut unnecessary words by highlighting them and deleting them.
- Be sure
to keep:
- the name of the person who was interviewed;
- the name of the interviewer (if
named);
- place of interview (if given); and
- the date of the interview (if given).
- Put a Title on the life history, your name, and period on the page.
- Choose a photograph that illustrates your life history. Save the small thumbnail version of the photograph to the desktop.
- Place the cursor over the image.
- Depress the mouse button (right button on a PC mouse).
- Select Save image as.
- Give the image a name and save it to the computer's desktop.
- In the word processor, place the image at the top of the life history. (On the word processor toolbar, choose Edit - Paste. The image should appear on the page.)
- SAVE
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Congratulations. You should have a finished product of a life history that you can show
in your portfolio.