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Melvin, Opal B. – Business Education World, 1976
Describes use of the Lester Hill Office Simulation, a program taught at the Tishomingo County Area Vocational-Technical Center in Mississippi. A fictitious company which provides students with the opportunity to gain realistic office experience in a classroom setting. Suggested ideas and optional activities can be used by teachers as a starting…
Descriptors: Business Education, Office Occupations, Office Occupations Education, Office Practice
Barger, Virginia – Bus Educ Forum, 1970
Descriptors: Grade 11, Grade 12, Office Occupations, Office Occupations Education
Warner, Jean Rockwell – Journal of Business Education, 1980
Reviews several specific ways in which office practice simulations can be measured and evaluated, including the salary theory; evaluation of ability to establish priorities and make decisions; evaluation of work produced; and publisher evaluations. (LRA)
Descriptors: Educational Assessment, Evaluation Methods, Laboratory Training, Office Occupations
Archer, Fred C. – Business Education World, 1969
Descriptors: Business Education, Office Occupations Education, Office Practice, Simulation
Neal, Dorothy A. – Journal of Business Education, 1982
Using office simulation in a practice/procedures class better prepares students to deal with actual working situations. To facilitate the office simulation, one must consider available equipment, provide interesting programs, be aware of student needs, provide realistic evaluation, and be an enthusiastic and flexible teacher. (JOW)
Descriptors: Office Occupations Education, Office Practice, Simulation, Teaching Methods
Wingo, Rosetta F. – 1978
Designed for office occupations teachers, this guide presents seven critical incidents that provide students with practice in human relations. The critical incidents focus on the following topics: office rumors, excessive borrowing, remembering names, adapting to change, carrying your load of work, personal calls on office phones, and coffee break…
Descriptors: Critical Incidents Method, Employer Employee Relationship, Human Relations, Office Occupations
Smith, Phyllis W. – 1975
The document is a student manual and teacher's manual for a simulated office practice class designed to give students training in a business office on school premises. In the simulation, students perform as office personnel and as customers and creditors. The first part of the guide, directed to students, contains: general information on the…
Descriptors: Business Education, Course Content, Curriculum Guides, Instructional Materials
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Matthews, James C. – Business Education Forum, 1976
Descriptors: Business Education, Office Occupations, Office Practice, Secretaries
Mosich, Doris – Journal of Business Education, 1974
A simulation of a buying service for a number of retail stores, termed FLAIR, is described as a flexible instructional vehicle meeting the needs of business procedures trainees attending the Southern California Regional Occupational Center. Training objectives, office organization, and the importance of real-world simulation in developing…
Descriptors: Business Education, Office Occupations Education, Office Practice, Simulation
Plough, Anita B. – EBTA Journal, 1971
Descriptors: Business Education, Office Occupations Education, Office Practice, Program Descriptions
North Carolina State Dept. of Public Instruction, Raleigh. Div. of Vocational Education. – 1988
This simulation is intended for use as a culminating activity after students have been exposed to personal and/or business letter writing, use of reference manuals, typing of letters, mailing procedures, typing of numbers, punctuation practice, and filing procedures. Stated objectives are to enable students to type a mailable letter; to inspect,…
Descriptors: Business Correspondence, Letters (Correspondence), Office Occupations Education, Office Practice
Warren, Ann – Balance Sheet, 1977
A high school business teacher answers teachers' questions on how to handle certain phases of office simulation. (MF)
Descriptors: Office Occupations Education, Office Practice, Secondary Education, Simulation
Church, Olive – Journal of Business Education, 1974
Twenty-four company position models were developed as career-cluster office experience materials. Each contained a student-employee kit and a teacher-supervisor kit. These occupational models were flexible, good substitutes for cooperative programs, and particularly helpful to the less-than-average ability student. (AG)
Descriptors: Business Education, Instructional Materials, Models, Occupational Clusters
Lynch, Claire – Bus Educ Forum, 1970
Descriptors: Office Occupations Education, Office Practice, Program Descriptions, Simulation
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Rains, Sherry – Business Education Forum, 1980
The office simulation course can be a very effective teaching method in the small school where schedules, staffing, financing, and community resources do not allow cooperative business education courses. Suggestions are provided for such exercises as an annual report, inventories, proofreading, and customer input data. (CT)
Descriptors: Office Occupations Education, Office Practice, Secondary Education, Simulated Environment
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