SPREADSHEETS

Carefully read these instructions.

Fill in all the blanks, (you must spell properly) then press "Check" to check your answers. Use the "Buy a Letter" button (it is at the bottom) to get the first letter if an answer is giving you trouble. Note that you will lose points if you buy a letter!

Do not stop. Do not start over. When you are finished with the last question, keep the score showing until Mrs. Bradley (or the sub) records your score and tells you it is OK to go on.

If an Information Bar window appears click OK.
Before starting, click on the actual Information Bar, then click Allow Blocked Content, click Yes at the Security Warning.

Microsoft Excel is the Office program we use in Otsego’s elementary buildings. We create a workbook for our spreadsheets.

A spreadsheet is a used to information. We can do calculations ( operations) with that information. Charts or may also be made using the Excel spreadsheet.

Vertical areas on a spreadsheet are called and are identified by at the top. Remember this by thinking of columns going up and down to support a building. go across horizontally (like seats in a theater) and are named by a at the left.

The intersection of a column and a row makes a small rectangle called a . A cell’s name is its column letter followed by its row number. Identifying on a spreadsheet is similar to identifying ship locations in the game Battleshipship locations in the game Battleship.