To learn Touch Typing, you start with a "home position", to which your fingers will always return after typing any key. The diagram below shows which keys are associated with each finger.
The "QWERTY" Keyboard Layout The standard keyboard layout was designed to keep the keys from jamming on early manual typewriters. By assigning the most commonly used letters of the alphabet to different fingers, the chance of jamming was reduced.
Left Hand Home Position Put your left index finger on the "F" key. The other fingers fall naturally onto the D, S, and A keys.
Right Hand Home Position Put your right index finger on the "J" key. The other fingers fall naturally onto the K, L, and semicolon keys.
Reminder Bumps On many keyboards, the F and J keys have a small raised bump to remind you when your index fingers are on the right keys. Look to see if these are available on your keyboard.
Don't Look! A basic principle of touch-typing is that you never look at your fingers when you are typing. This takes practice, so don't get discouraged if you have trouble at first.
Typing Drill Open your word-processor program and type the sentence "The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog". It contains every letter in the alphabet and is a great way to become familiar with the keyboard. Once you can type it comfortably, try these additional exercises:
Type it without looking at your hands?
Type it with a capital letter at the start of each word
Type it in all capital letters, but without using the "Caps Lock" key.
How many times can you type it correctly in one minute?
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