Early Years:
Discuss where you were born, your home, your family, your friends, your school,
and any memorable occasions.
High School Years:
Describe your high school, your friends in high school, your favorite subjects,
favorite teachers, extracurricular activities, and any memorable occasions.
Future Plans:
Discuss what will you do when you graduate. If you plans include college, discuss
where your are going to apply, why you decided to go there, your planned major,
and when you will graduate. After college or high school graduation, where you
want to live, and how you intend to accomplish your goals.
Double space the report and indent the first line of each paragraph. To double
space the text, you must display the Paragraph dialog box. If you are beginning
your report, open the box, or if your report is already typed, select all the
text before opening the Paragraph dialog box.
To display the Paragraph dialog box, click Format, and then Paragraph.
At the Paragraph dialog box, make sure the Indents and Spacing tab is selected,
click the arrow under the spacing box, and then choose double.
To indent the first line of each paragraph, press the Tab key.
Check page breaks in the document and adjust them if needed. To check for page
breaks, you will need to change to the Print Layout view. The default view for
Word is Normal, which displays a page break as a row of dots. In Print Layout
view, a page break displays as an actual break in a page.
To change to the Print Layout view, click View and then Print Layout or click
the Print Layout View button at the left side of the horizontal scroll bar.
(The Print Layout View button is the third button from the left side of the
screen before the horizontal scroll bar.)
To change back to the Normal view, click View and the Normal or click the Normal
View button at the left side of the horizontal scroll bar. (The Normal View
button is the first button from the left.)
You need to be in Print Layout View to check page breaks. If you have an orphan
line, a line in a paragraph by itself on a different page, you should keep the
paragraph together. To keep a paragraph together, you can instruct Word not
to insert a page break within a paragraph.
To instruct Word not to insert a page break within a paragraph, display the
Paragraph dialog box with the Line and Page Breaks tab selected, and the click
Keep line together. The same steps can be used to keep a group of consecutive
paragraphs together. To do this, select the paragraphs first, display the Paragraph
dialog box, and then click Keep lines together.
Proofread and spell check.
Save the document and name it Proj2.