Document Formatting: Fonts, Styles, and Alignment
Master the visual language of documents - a critical CSEC IT skill for creating professional, readable content!
First Impressions Count: The Goal of Formatting
The Purpose: Formatting isn't just about making documents look pretty—it's about enhancing readability, creating visual hierarchy, and establishing professionalism.
CSEC Requirement: Distinguishing between character, paragraph, and page formatting is essential for the exam and practical work.
Slide to see how proper formatting transforms a document!
Character Formatting: The Basics of Typography
Font Choice Matters
- Serif Fonts (Times New Roman, Georgia): Best for printed body text—the small strokes guide the reader's eye.
- Sans Serif Fonts (Arial, Calibri): Ideal for digital screens and headings—clean and modern.
Emphasis Tools
- Bold: Use for key terms or headings
- Italics: For emphasis, foreign words, or publication titles
- Underline: Generally avoided in modern documents (use bold or italics instead)
Match fonts to the appropriate document type!
Formal Letter
To the Principal
Party Flyer
Birthday Celebration
Research Paper
Science Report
Drag a font here to preview
Paragraph Alignment and Spacing
Alignment Options
- Left Aligned: Standard for most documents (ragged right edge)
- Right Aligned: Used for dates, signatures, or special layouts
- Centered: Ideal for titles, invitations, and headings
- Justified: Creates clean vertical edges on both sides (common in newspapers, magazines, and formal reports)
Spacing Considerations
- Line Spacing: Single (1.0), 1.5 lines, or Double (2.0) spacing
- Paragraph Spacing: Space before/after paragraphs (better than double returns!)
- Indentation: First-line indent vs. Hanging indent (for bibliographies)
Click buttons to see different alignment options in action!
The Caribbean Secondary Education Certificate (CSEC) Information Technology examination assesses students' practical skills in document creation, spreadsheets, and databases. Proper formatting is essential for creating professional documents that communicate clearly and effectively. In the practical exam, students must demonstrate their ability to apply appropriate formatting to various document types.
Styles: Formatting at Scale
What Are Styles?
Styles are predefined sets of formatting (Heading 1, Heading 2, Normal, etc.) that ensure consistency throughout a document.
Why Use Styles?
- Efficiency: Update one style to change all text with that style
- Consistency: All headings look the same throughout the document
- Navigation: Enables automatic Table of Contents generation
- Accessibility: Screen readers use styles to navigate documents
Modify the Heading 1 style and watch all headings update instantly!
This document demonstrates how styles work in word processing software.
Understanding the difference between serif and sans serif fonts.
Exploring left, center, right, and justified alignment.
Lists: Bullets and Numbering
Types of Lists
- Unordered Lists (Bullets): For items with no specific sequence or priority
- Ordered Lists (Numbering): For step-by-step instructions or ranked items
- Multilevel Lists: For organizing complex information with sub-points
CSEC Application
In the SBA (School-Based Assessment), proper list formatting can make procedures clearer and documents more professional.
Choose the appropriate list type for each SBA task!
Task: Steps to create a database
Should this be a bulleted or numbered list?
CSEC Practice: Formatting Challenge
Practical Task
"Apply a 12pt Calibri font, double spacing, and justified alignment to the body text. Apply a 16pt Bold Heading Style to the title."
Key Terminology
Character Formatting
Formatting applied to individual characters (font, size, color)
Paragraph Formatting
Formatting applied to entire paragraphs (alignment, spacing, indentation)
Page Formatting
Formatting applied to entire pages (margins, orientation, headers/footers)
Style
A named set of formatting characteristics
Answer quickly! Identify the correct formatting icons and shortcut keys.
