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Week 4: Keyboard Ninja Training

Touch Typing Foundations

So far we’ve learned:

  • the internet connects people
  • computers respond to inputs
  • our creations can be saved as files

Now we learn one of the most important computer skills of all:

Typing.

Typing is one of the main ways humans communicate with computers.
When you type, the computer instantly turns your key presses into letters, words, and ideas.

The big idea this week:

The keyboard is a communication tool.

Learning to type comfortably will make everything else in this course easier — writing stories, searching the internet, coding, and even asking AI questions later.


Caregiver Snapshot
  • You do not need to teach every bullet on the page. Use the learning goal and one or two activities for the session you are teaching today.
  • If time is short, teach one guided session well and leave the rest for later. The lessons are designed to stretch across the week.
  • The independent session works best after the learner has already explored the main idea with you once.

Teacher Preparation

Before You Begin
  • Time needed: ~30–40 minutes per guided session, ~20–30 minutes for the independent session.
  • Devices needed: One computer with a physical keyboard (external keyboards work well for smaller hands).
  • Accounts needed: None required. TypingClub and BBC Dance Mat Typing are free and do not require sign-up for basic use.
  • Ensure the keyboard is comfortable and easy to reach.
  • Bookmark a beginner typing site such as:
  • Ensure Notepad or another simple writing app is available.
  • Prepare to demonstrate the home row keys.
  • Set up a visual timer.
Teaching Mindset

Accuracy matters more than speed.

Typing should feel like learning a musical instrument — practice, patience, and small improvements over time.

Keep it playful and relaxed.

🔒 Safety Note

Watch for signs of hand or wrist discomfort during typing practice. Ensure the keyboard is at a comfortable height, the learner’s feet reach the floor (or use a footrest), and encourage short breaks every 10–15 minutes. Typing should never feel painful — if it does, stop and adjust the setup.


Guided Session 1

Meeting the Keyboard

Learning Goal

By the end of this session, the student can:

  • analyze how different groups of keys change what happens on the screen
  • choose the right keys for a typing or command task
  • create a simple typed response using deliberate key choices and starting hand position

Activities

1. Keyboard Exploration

Ask the student to simply look at the keyboard.

Ask questions like:

  • “What do you notice?”
  • “Why do you think there are so many keys?”

Point out several key groups:

  • letter keys
  • number keys
  • space bar
  • enter
  • backspace

Explain that each key sends an input to the computer.

Connect back to Week 2:

“Typing is another way we give the computer instructions.”


2. Try the Important Keys

Open Notepad.

Let the student experiment with a few keys:

  • letters
  • space bar
  • enter
  • backspace
  • Shift (hold it and press a letter — it makes a capital!)

Observe what happens when:

  • space adds distance between words
  • enter creates a new line
  • backspace deletes something
  • Shift + a letter makes that letter uppercase

Encourage curiosity.

Ask:

"What do you think this key will do?"


2a. Your First Keyboard Shortcut: Ctrl+S

Once the student has typed a few words, introduce the very first keyboard shortcut:

"Instead of using the menu to save, you can press Ctrl and S at the same time. It saves your work instantly."

Let them try it. Explain:

  • Ctrl stands for Control — it is a "helper key" that gives other keys special powers
  • Ctrl+S means "Save" — it works in almost every app
  • Building the habit of pressing Ctrl+S often protects your work

This shortcut will come back every week from now on.


3. Home Row Introduction

Show the home row keys:

A S D F J K L

Explain that many typists rest their fingers here.

Have the student gently place their fingers on those keys.

Explain this is the starting position for typing.

Do not worry about perfection — this is just familiarity.


Reflection Questions

  • “Which keys seem most useful for creating or changing text, and why?”
  • “How do different keys create different results on the screen?”
  • “If you were teaching someone else the keyboard, which keys would you introduce first?”

Sentence starters for younger learners:

  • “The most useful key I found was… because…”
  • “I noticed that when I pressed…, it…”

Guided Session 2

Typing Practice Adventure

Learning Goal

By the end of this session, the student can:

  • evaluate their own typing for accuracy, spacing, and control
  • revise finger placement and typing habits to improve performance
  • create a short typed message that shows growing fluency and care

Activities

1. Try a Typing Game

Open one beginner lesson on:

  • TypingClub
    or
  • BBC Dance Mat Typing

Explain that typing games help train your fingers to find the right keys quickly.

Let the student work through the first lesson.

Encourage patience.

Mistakes are normal.


2. Write a Short Message

Open Notepad.

Ask the student to type a short message.

Examples:

  • “My favorite animal is a dog.”
  • “I like building things.”
  • “I want to learn how computers work.”

Focus on:

  • spacing words
  • using backspace to fix mistakes
  • pressing Enter for a new line

3. Add a Title

Ask the student to type a title at the top.

Example:

My Favorite Animal

Explain that typing allows us to communicate ideas clearly.

Save the file inside:

My Projects → Stories


Reflection Questions

  • “What patterns helped you find keys more quickly?”
  • “Which typing habit would help you improve the most next time?”
  • “How does stronger typing help someone create, communicate, or solve problems on a computer?”

Sentence starters for younger learners:

  • “One pattern that helped me type faster was…”
  • “Next time I practice, I want to work on…”

Independent Session

Ninja Practice

Instruction

Choose one typing activity to practice for about 20–30 minutes with a clear goal.

As you work, pay attention to:

  • which keys slow you down
  • where your fingers start and move
  • what helps you type more accurately

If you choose writing, create a short message or paragraph that shows careful spacing, clear sentences, and a title.

When you finish, reflect on what improved and what you still want to practice, then save your work in your My Projects folder.


Skills Reinforced

  • analyzing key functions and their effects
  • improving typing accuracy through reflection and revision
  • correcting mistakes strategically while typing
  • creating and saving typed work with growing fluency

Setup

  • typing practice website open
    or
  • Notepad available
  • access to the My Projects folder
  • visual timer

🔄 Simplify or Extend

To simplify:

  • Skip the home row introduction and just let the learner freely explore typing their name and favorite words in Notepad.
  • Use only one typing game or activity per session instead of combining a game with a writing task.

To extend:

  • Challenge the learner to type a full paragraph (4–5 sentences) about a topic they enjoy and save it with a title.
  • Introduce the Shift key for capital letters and ask the learner to type proper sentences with correct capitalization.
  • Practice the Ctrl+S shortcut multiple times during the session so it becomes second nature.

💾 Save This Week’s Artifact

Save a short typed paragraph or message the learner created in Notepad, or a screenshot of their typing practice score from TypingClub or Dance Mat Typing. Store it in the My Projects → Stories folder. This will become part of their collection of work that builds toward the final project.

✅ Success Indicators

By the end of this week, look for whether the learner can:

  • Place their fingers on or near the home row keys (A S D F — J K L) with gentle reminders
  • Type their own name and a simple sentence without looking at the screen for every letter
  • Use the space bar, Enter, and Backspace keys with growing confidence
  • Identify and press specific keys when asked (e.g., “Can you find the letter T?”)
  • Show comfort sitting at the keyboard and willingness to keep practicing
  • Save their typed work to the correct folder in their My Projects system
  • Use Ctrl+S to save their work at least once during a session (with a reminder)

Vocabulary This Week

KeyboardHome rowSpace barEnterBackspaceShiftCtrl (Control key)Keyboard shortcutCtrl+S (Save)
See the Glossary for definitions.