What is the best way to learn the ins and outs of Microsoft Office programs?
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@scottalanmiller said:
MSPress has some great titles. They have a range that starts with introducing the tools up to MOUS certifications.
What is a MOUS certification?
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Lynda has some good online training too.
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@LadyJane said:
@scottalanmiller said:
MSPress has some great titles. They have a range that starts with introducing the tools up to MOUS certifications.
What is a MOUS certification?
Microsoft Office User Specialist. It is the only official certification on the MS Office platform.
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@scottalanmiller That sounds interesting - I will check it out, thanks!
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They have two levels for most exams. A starter cert and then an "advanced" cert. I know Excel has both levels. Not sure about other products.
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@scottalanmiller What is the purpose of that over a singular certification? I mean - is there a point to a "beginner" Excel cert? Or is it like the A+ certs?
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@Katie said:
@scottalanmiller What is the purpose of that over a singular certification? I mean - is there a point to a "beginner" Excel cert? Or is it like the A+ certs?
There is a cert path for "normal" people and an extra, higher cert for people who are seriously hard core into the applications.
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Sorry. The cert is MOS.
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Excel and Word are the only two products that have the next level, MOS Expert.
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There is a six cert cumulative cert that includes four MOS certs plus the two MOS Expert certs to achieve the MOS Master cert.
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@scottalanmiller I am a "normal" and I am not sure how having a certification will help me help others. Perhaps it is in the training that I am best served. And for that I do not need a certification to study up.
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Even if you don't need certification, the process if studying for a cert can be a great way to learn a product or technology.
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@scottalanmiller said:
Sorry. The cert is MOS.
It used to be called MOUS when I got it back in Office 2000. Its definitely a good cert to have. It doesnt really spark much interest on my resume, but It comes in handy when I am working in Excel or Word.
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@LadyJane said:
@scottalanmiller I am a "normal" and I am not sure how having a certification will help me help others. Perhaps it is in the training that I am best served. And for that I do not need a certification to study up.
KnowledgeNet offers very reasonable Microsoft Office Course for end users. They also offer MOS training
knowledgenet.com/category/end-user -
O'Rielly's is currently selling all of their MS Press books for 60% off - full non DRM ebooks. I picked up Excel and Outlook 2013.
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@Dashrender said:
O'Rielly's is currently selling all of their MS Press books for 60% off - full non DRM ebooks. I picked up Excel and Outlook 2013.
Its alot easier to get an end user to participate in online training vs reading a book, though.
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@IRJ said:
@Dashrender said:
O'Rielly's is currently selling all of their MS Press books for 60% off - full non DRM ebooks. I picked up Excel and Outlook 2013.
Its alot easier to get an end user to participate in online training vs reading a book, though.
Very true. Depends for whom the training is being acquired.
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@IRJ said:
@Dashrender said:
O'Rielly's is currently selling all of their MS Press books for 60% off - full non DRM ebooks. I picked up Excel and Outlook 2013.
Its alot easier to get an end user to participate in online training vs reading a book, though.
You're absolutely correct - but if this is for someone who's reading these forums.. there's a good chance they'd be at least willing to flip through a book, even if they don't read it cover to cover.
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@Dashrender very true.
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General thought of the MOS cert is a good way to differentiate those who say "I know Microsoft Office", and the ones who can actually use Excel pivot tables, outlines in PPT, mult-level page numbering it Word, and generally using macros.
@LadyJane said:
What is a MOUS certification?
Microsoft’s map for the intermediate, expert, and master level—
- Roadmap, http://download.microsoft.com/download/6/D/8/6D8AFAB4-A1EA-4087-AFF1-DFDFF5F526EA/ITA_Certification_Paths.pdf
- Added bits, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microsoft_Certified_Professional#Microsoft_Office_Specialist_.28MOS.29
@scottalanmiller said:
@Katie said:
@scottalanmiller What is the purpose of that over a singular certification? I mean - is there a point to a "beginner" Excel cert? Or is it like the A+ certs?
There is a cert path for "normal" people and an extra, higher cert for people who are seriously hard core into the applications.
Good thing about going through the material is being exposed to the names of the features. Makes googling/searching for their particulars easier.
Microsoft tends to have tons of free stuff on their site...but can be difficult to find. MS IT Academy is a low cost option fairly widely available—
As always, try a local library for books. Technical books in my area libraries get overlooked. Having a foundation of the MS Office programs from even a version or two old MS Office (2010/2013 vs 365) books ought be better than most users.