Microsoft Office/Create a Newsletter

< Microsoft Office

Vocabulary

Lesson

Set Margins

Create a Nameplate

Using Word Art

Adding Ruling Lines

Click on the WordArt title you just created to select it.

Adding an Issue Information Line

Setting Tab Stops

Placing a Symbol in a document

Finish typing the volume and issue, type: Issue 1

Working with a Floating Graphic

Place a Bottom Border

Format the Main Article of a Newsletter

Add an Article Title

Add a Continuous Section Break

Place the text of the article

A virus is a malicious computer program or programming code that replicates by infecting files, installed software or removable media. A virus usually carries a destructive payload, which varies depending on the virus author’s intentions. A typical virus infects, corrupts or deletes files and folders, damages the system, drops other dangerous parasites, steals or discloses user sensitive information. Extremely dangerous viruses can also wipe out all the data from hard disks and even severely damage certain computer hardware devices.

By replication approaches viruses are divided into three main categories:

  1. parasites called file infectors are designed to propagate by infecting or corrupting various files;
  2. threats known as boot record infectors spread through removable media containing infected executable code and insert themselves into the master boot record (MBR) on hard disks;
  3. widely spread macro viruses affect certain applications such as Microsoft Word or Microsoft Excel and infect documents that can contain macros.

Some viruses do not belong to any of these categories, as they combine features and functions specific to more than one virus type. Such threats, sometimes called hybrid viruses, can infect both files and master boot record and replicate by attaching malicious code to user documents. These parasites are very difficult to completely get rid of, as they usually consist of several components, which automatically reinstall each other after the user have found and removed few of them.

Many viruses have extra features, which allow them to escape detection by antivirus software. Such threats use several approaches to stay hidden. Some of them, known as stealth viruses, monitor antivirus software activity and intercept its requests to the operating system. When the antivirus attempts to check an infected file, the virus immediately passes the original clean variant of that file, so the antivirus is unable to find any malicious code in it. Other parasites, called polymorphic viruses, are able to mutate continuously modifying their code, so that two files infected by the same pest have no common parts. Polymorphic viruses are extremely difficult to detect.


Change the number of columns

Justify a Paragraph

Format a Drop Cap

Insert a Column Break

Insert a file into a column

Next Meeting:
Feb 20th in the Business Lab
3:30 – 4:30

Special Meeting:
Feb 15 in the Multi-Purpose Room

A light snack will be provided, and a guest speaker will come to take about and answer all your questions to do with what happens now that I have a virus?
If you plan on attending please send an email message to tec_club@gmail.com. The cost of the session is $10 per person to be paid at the door.

Next issue
What a virus does.
Examples of viruses

Project

Pick a category for a newsletter: Vet Office, City Council, Horse Training, Snowboarding, ...
The newsletter must contain:

Rubric

Newsletter Rubric
Standards 1 point 2 points 3 points 4 points 5 points
Creates a Nameplate with an appropriate title for category Is missing four or more items Is missing three items Is missing two items Is missing one items Includes newsletter name, Monthly Newsletter, Vol #, Issue #, a graphic, and is visually appealing
Creates a heading for each article and matches fonts Four sections do not match fonts, or is missing a heading Three sections do not match fonts, or is missing a heading Two sections do not match fonts, or is missing a heading One section does not match fonts, or is missing a heading All fonts match for regular text and for headings. Each article in the newsletter has a heading, and each section in the current events section on the first page has a heading.
Creates a Pull Quote Finds a quote in one of the articles. Creates a text box for the quote. Finds a quote in one of the articles. Creates a text box for the quote. Formats the text box to match the style or format of the rest of the newsletter. Finds a quote in one of the articles. Creates a text box for the quote. Formats the text box to match the style and format of the rest of the newsletter. Finds a quote in one of the articles that would draw the readers attention. Creates a text box for the quote. Formats the text box to match the style and format of the rest of the newsletter. Finds a quote in one of the articles that would draw and catch the readers attention. Creates a text box for the quote. Formats the text box to match the style and format of the rest of the newsletter.
Formatted in three columns with current events section on front page and a page border Creates a newsletter with three columns. Creates a newsletter with three columns and has a page border. Name plate is one column. Creates the newsletter with three columns. All the pages have a page border. Name plate is one column on both pages. Creates the newsletter with three columns but all of the breaks might not be correct. All the pages have a page border. Name Plate is one column on both pages. Creates section, page, and column breaks correctly to format the newsletter with three columns. The current events section is on the front page. Both pages have a page border that matches the style and format of the rest of the newsletter.
Creates a heading section on page 2 Page two has a name plate section with some of the name of the newsletter, monthly newsletter, issue # and volume #. Page two has a name plate section with most of the name of the newsletter, monthly newsletter, issue # and volume #. Page two has a name plate section with the name of the newsletter, monthly newsletter, issue # and volume #. Page two has a name plate section with the name of the newsletter, monthly newsletter, issue # and volume #. Formatting matches page one's name plate. Page two has a name plate section with the name of the newsletter, monthly newsletter, issue # and volume #. All formatting matches page one's name plate.
Creates a diagram or organizational chart Chart is used to bring attention to some aspect of your newsletter. The formatting fits the rest of the newsletter. Chart is used to bring attention to some aspect of your newsletter. The formatting fits the rest of the newsletter. The fonts are big enough to read easily. Chart is used to bring attention to some aspect of your newsletter. The formatting fits the rest of the newsletter. The fonts are big enough to read easily. Everything is spelled correctly. Chart is used to bring attention to some aspect that your article is discussing. The formatting fits the rest of the newsletter. The fonts are big enough to read easily. Everything is spelled correctly. Chart is used to bring attention to some important aspect that your article is discussing. The formatting fits the rest of the newsletter. The fonts are big enough to read easily. Everything is spelled correctly.
Peer Editing - Has someone peer edit the document and accepts or denies changes as necessary Rarely provides useful ideas. May refuse to participate. Provides work that needs to be checked/redone by others to ensure quality. Rarely provides useful ideas. Provides work that usually needs to be checked/redone by others to ensure quality. Sometimes provides useful ideas. A satisfactory group member who does what is required.Provides work that occasionally needs to be checked/redone by other group members to ensure quality. Usually provides useful ideas. A strong group member who tries hard! Provides high quality work. Routinely provides useful ideas and contributes a lot of effort. Provides work of the highest quality.
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