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You can create templates to standardize the various types of
documents your students produce: research papers, book reports, and so on. Or,
have student teams produce document templates and justify their design. Use
templates for consistency in your classroom and across your department. You can
also explore the templates that come with Word 2000. Templates are powerful
tools that save time and decrease the number of mistakes in documents. They
give a uniform look and feel to the various types of documents you create.
Every Microsoft Word document is based on a template. A
template determines the basic structure for a document and contains document
settings such as AutoText entries, fonts, key assignments, macros, menus, page
layout, special formatting, and styles.
The two basic types of templates are global templates and
document templates. Global templates, including the Normal template, contain
settings that are available to all documents. Document templates, such as the
memo or fax templates in the
New
dialog box, contain settings that are available only to documents based on that
template. For example, if you create a memo using the memo template, the memo
can use the settings from both the memo template as well as the settings in any
global template. Word 2000 provides a variety of document templates and you can
create your own document templates.
The value of a Word 2000 template is simple: it can be used
over and over to produce variations of a particular look, but without changing
the original itself (unless, of course, you want or need to change it). There
are two ways of creating a template: you can start a new document, indicating
that it is to be a template; or you can save a document as a template.
TO CREATE A TEMPLATE
1.
On the
File
menu, click New.
2.
Click the
General
tab and then click Blank
Document.
3.
Under
Create New
in the lower-right corner, click
Template.
4.
Click
OK.
5.
Create and format the document as you normally would including styles,
headers, footers, tables, and so forth.
6.
From the File menu, click
Save As, and in the
File Name box, type a name for your template. In
the Save As Type list,
select Document Template.
7.
The Templates folder appears in the
Save
In box. Save the new template in the Templates folder so it can be
easily retrieved and used to create other documents based on its
characteristics.
8.
Click
Save.
9.
To use the template, on the
File
menu, click New. You
will see different tabs with different names containing the various templates
that came with Word 2000. The template you just created should be on the
General tab.
10.
Click the name of the template and then click
OK. You have now created a new file based on
your test template, but the template itself has not been opened or changed in
any way. Since this is a new document, even though it's based on an existing
template, you need to give it a new name.
11.
From the File menu, click
Save
As.
12.
In the
File Name
box, type the name of the document and then click
Save.
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