Gary B. Shelly, Thomas J. Cashman, and Joy L. Starks (
Editorial Reviews
Product Description:For the past three decades, the Shelly Cashman Series® has effectively introduced computers to millions of students – consistently providing the highest quality, most up-to-date, and innovative materials in computer education. Enjoy the proven step-by-step style and improved Office 2003 updates of the Shelly Cashman Series® and enhance your Office application skills today!
Six projects, an E-Mail Feature, an Integration Feature, and four appendices offer an in-depth presentation of Publisher 2003.
Includes coverage of the new features of Microsoft Publisher.
Extensive end-of-project exercises, including the unique Cases and Places case studies that require critical thinking, reinforce the concepts and skills learned.
"Learn It Online" Web page helps students learn and master skills through a variety of innovative activities, including project reinforcement exercises, practice tests, flashcards, learning games, and more.
Customer Reviews
Average Customer Review
Publisher 2003 Review, May 12, 2007
By
Ronald J. MaynardI am glad I purchased this Shelly, Cashman Publisher manual. It has helped me better understand Publisher and how to create newsletters, flyers, brochures and how to use mail merge. I feel that I got my moneys worth purchasing this product and would recommend this product to anybody.
The cover says "complete" but it isn't, March 22, 2007
By
T. Stewartgordon (Dallas, TX USA)
I suppose the acknowledgement that this book was created using Quark Express ought to tell the careful reader all he needs to know about Shelly Cashman and Starks's effort to explain Microsoft's desktop publishing software. At almost $60 a copy, this is the most expensive giant goldenbook I have hear of.
I bought this book to find out how to create a booklet of 20, 8.5x11 sheets folded into 8.5x 5.5 pages, printed on all four sides, a common situation in publishing. The table of contents says that bookfold will be addressed on PUB (why PUB and not page?) 258. It isn't.
All in all, this is a sloppily done work for which the people at Thomson ought to be deeply ashamed.
Tom Gordon
Dallas TX
Good Step-By-Step Projects, December 11, 2006
By
Max Laing (Gettysburg, PA)
This is a good book for beginners in Publisher to learn the program. It provides good projects that help show the features of Publisher. To me, it is not a "reference" book for tips on the program--it makes you do projects to learn the program. The good thing is, it gives you multiple projects for all sorts of uses of the program, so that you will learn how to use a lot of the features and templates that the program has to offer. I was required to complete projects in this book for a graduate course in Desktop Publishing. It was good for that use. I would use the step-by-step projects in the book with my high school students too.
More for high school kids....but...., May 19, 2006
By
B. J. Barney III (Swanton, OH USA)
The "but" is after reading the first chapter of this book and looking through the contents there are some useful projects. I've been using Publisher since 2000 for a newsletter and brochure for a non-profit group and not much more. But now I can see several new uses for the program and I'll give them a try. Granted it's not a hard program to master the bare essentials but I think this book may open a much wider range of uses for this user. The only bad thing is the steep price for the book itself. I really would like to give the book a 3.75 star rating...