Designed to slow you down?

Regular QWERTY keyboards of today were never designed with speed in mind.  Letters and keys are in awkward positions making typing a challenge and a frustrating experience for most people.  [Read more]   And yet typing has become an important life skill and computer literacy skill in this age of information and computers.  Some computer input options such as speech recognition are showing great promise for helping us speed up our text input and computer operation.  Until the time when speech recognition has become an everyday, mainstream technology however, many of us will continue to use the regular old 'qwerty' keyboard designed so many years ago.

Your typing speed is important!  For many jobs, typing speed is a prerequisite for the job.  Everyone knows that a person's proficiency rating in typing is measured by speed:  words per minute (wpm).  No one talks about percentage accuracy.   We always hear about a person's wpm.

A speed of 40 wpm is the basic minimum standard required by many employers and government positions.  Effective typing speeds should be at least 3 - 4 times your handwriting speed.

 

How is speed calculated?

The standard formula is as follows: The number of characters typed is divided by 5 (the average word length, including a space in-between words). This is divided by the exercise time, in seconds, and then multiplied by 60 to get words per minute.

Techniques for increasing speed  (This is the second stage of typing training)

Automatic movements - motor (physical) learning and kinesthesia:
Speed can only increase once typing keys on the keyboard becomes a more automatic physical motor process.  People normally learn 'where' the keys are on the keyboard very quickly.  Developing the skill and speed to hit the letters quickly, accurately and in the correct sequence involves more effort and takes much longer.  Kinesthesia is an essential motor skill that people use all the time.  This allows us to ride a bike, drive a car, write, feed ourselves and perform thousands of movements a day without 'thinking' about how to perform the movement.  The motor planning for these physical skills is subconscious, and the movements are 'a u t o m a t i c'!   We don't need to be looking at our hands and body while performing these actions.  You may have a very good knowledge of the qwerty keyboard.  You may be able to remember exact locations of each letter on the keyboard.  Given a blank layout, you might be able to write in most letters and numbers correctly.  But - you still might be a slow, hunt-and-peck typist. This proves the point that no matter how well you know the keyboard, your fingers need to develop the movement patterns, control and 'kinesthetic' physical 'muscle and movement' memory of where each specific key is located.....   without vision !! 
 

Likewise, the physical act of typing keys on the keyboard must become an 'automatic' kinesthetic task which doesn't require thinking about the keys or looking at the keyboard.  Any thinking should be about the 'content' of what is being typed:  the words and sentences, not the physical act of pressing the correct keys.

In summary: Motor Learning and Kinesthesia - these sound like big words, but the concepts are simple.  Motor or physical learning happens with repetition.  Your fingers will 'learn' the movement patterns and paths for each letter.  The less you rely on your vision, the more your fingers take over the motor tasks of 'remembering' the position in space of each letter.  

Developing automatic movements and increasing speed requires the following steps:

1.   Learn good technique first
Learn where the keys are and which fingers should be used for each key. Also use good body and arm/hand positioning - good ergonomics.  This will be the basis for long term good typing habits. 

2.   Repetition - repetition - repetition
Automatic movements are only developed through plenty of repetition and practice.  Muscles and joints learn position in space and movement patterns through continuous movement in the patterns to be learned.  Every athlete and sportsman knows that regardless of talent, practice is what makes the body work well. 

3.  Don't look
No matter how tempted you are, once you have learned the correct finger placement and which fingers to use for specific keys, practice typing without looking.  Being tempted to look at your fingers reduces the motor training effect, and relies more heavily on vision for finding the correct keys rather than the kinesthetic 'muscle and sensory' senses of the fingers.  Developing good speed will be significantly hindered if vision is used.  This is true of the whole typing process, since looking at the keyboard results in the visual shift from keyboard to screen to paper documents, thus reducing the efficiency of typing in all ways. 

4.  Be disciplined!
This point cannot be emphasized enough.  Instead of focusing on accuracy of key hits, rather work on your SPEED during this second phase of training.  You can make corrections later, but for now, work on getting your speed up without looking!  Put a towel over your hands if necessary.  [product idea]

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