Chapter 10 Basic Skills. I. The Starting Point--Basic Skills A. Reading, Writing, and Math B....

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Chapter 10 Basic Skills

Transcript of Chapter 10 Basic Skills. I. The Starting Point--Basic Skills A. Reading, Writing, and Math B....

Page 1: Chapter 10 Basic Skills. I. The Starting Point--Basic Skills A. Reading, Writing, and Math B. Foundation of more advanced skills C. These 3 are the key.

Chapter 10

Basic Skills

Page 2: Chapter 10 Basic Skills. I. The Starting Point--Basic Skills A. Reading, Writing, and Math B. Foundation of more advanced skills C. These 3 are the key.

I. The Starting Point--Basic Skills

A. Reading, Writing, and MathB. Foundation of more advanced skillsC. These 3 are the key to success

Page 3: Chapter 10 Basic Skills. I. The Starting Point--Basic Skills A. Reading, Writing, and Math B. Foundation of more advanced skills C. These 3 are the key.

II. Reading Skills

A. Most jobs involve reading B. must be able to read for: 1. business letters 2. orders from customers so you can fill them 3. directions for operating equipment 4. instructions from supervisor 5. policies and procedures for your workplace C. Practice, practice, practice D. vocabulary--the group of words you use and know E. use dictionary

Page 4: Chapter 10 Basic Skills. I. The Starting Point--Basic Skills A. Reading, Writing, and Math B. Foundation of more advanced skills C. These 3 are the key.

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Page 5: Chapter 10 Basic Skills. I. The Starting Point--Basic Skills A. Reading, Writing, and Math B. Foundation of more advanced skills C. These 3 are the key.

III. Writing Skills A. need them for: 1. telephone messages 2. memos to your coworkers 3. business letters to customers 4. orders from customers 5. reports of your job activities B. illiterate--can’t read or write 1. thousands in US 2. = job loss or can’t get a job C. Quality of writing 1. it shows what kind of person you are a. poor writing/lot of errors = lazy b. good writing = good worker

Page 6: Chapter 10 Basic Skills. I. The Starting Point--Basic Skills A. Reading, Writing, and Math B. Foundation of more advanced skills C. These 3 are the key.

D. Proofread 1. Check over your written work for errors E. Practice, Practice, Practice 1. journals, logs, stories, etc

F. Using the Computer 1. good way to practice writing 2. can edit easily 3. word processing programs (Microsoft Work

and Appleworks) 4. spell and grammar checks

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Page 7: Chapter 10 Basic Skills. I. The Starting Point--Basic Skills A. Reading, Writing, and Math B. Foundation of more advanced skills C. These 3 are the key.

IV. Math Skills

A. most jobs require mathB. use math for: 1. bakers and chefs measure ingredients 2. nurses must give patients the correct doses

of medicine 3. architects use precise measurements when

drawing plans 4. salespeople add totals and subtract

discounts 5. carpenters take frequent measurements

Page 8: Chapter 10 Basic Skills. I. The Starting Point--Basic Skills A. Reading, Writing, and Math B. Foundation of more advanced skills C. These 3 are the key.

Careers that you need good math skills

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Page 9: Chapter 10 Basic Skills. I. The Starting Point--Basic Skills A. Reading, Writing, and Math B. Foundation of more advanced skills C. These 3 are the key.

C. Counting Change 1. Don’t rush 2. stay calm

D. Measurements 1. fashion designers 2. chemists 3. engineers Metric System: Look at chart on page 136 Measurement conversions: Look at chart on page 137

Page 10: Chapter 10 Basic Skills. I. The Starting Point--Basic Skills A. Reading, Writing, and Math B. Foundation of more advanced skills C. These 3 are the key.

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Page 11: Chapter 10 Basic Skills. I. The Starting Point--Basic Skills A. Reading, Writing, and Math B. Foundation of more advanced skills C. These 3 are the key.

VII. Work Keeps the Economy Strong

A. Economy: a country’s way of producing, distributing, and consuming goods and services

*Refer to page 23

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Page 12: Chapter 10 Basic Skills. I. The Starting Point--Basic Skills A. Reading, Writing, and Math B. Foundation of more advanced skills C. These 3 are the key.

VIII. Work Requires Know-How

A. SCANS: Secretary’s Commission on Achieving Necessary Skills

B. Workers need Foundation Skills 1. Basic skills: reading, writing, math,

speaking 2. Thinking skills: thinking creatively,

solving problems, visualizing, knowing how to learn 3. Personal qualities: individual

responsibility, self-esteem, management, integrity

Page 13: Chapter 10 Basic Skills. I. The Starting Point--Basic Skills A. Reading, Writing, and Math B. Foundation of more advanced skills C. These 3 are the key.

A. competent: having the ability to respond appropriately

1. competence with resources 2. competence with interpersonal skills 3. competence with information 4. competence with systems 5. competence with technology

IX. Workers Need SCANS Competencies