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- GETGOING.DOC Page 1
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- INSTALLING AND RUNNING MTG
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- If you want to run Making The Grade from your hard drive
- and you haven't yet installed it, put the program disk in
- floppy drive A or B. Assuming you're using drive A
- (substitute 'B' if not), log on to drive A by typing A: at the
- DOS prompt. To install MTG, next type INSTALL, and let the
- installer copy all program files into C:\MTG. When
- installation is complete, MTG can be run directly from the
- installer, or exit to DOS and type MTG at the prompt.
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- If you've already installed MTG or you're running it from
- a floppy disk, log on to the drive and subdirectory containing
- MTG. For example, if the program is in C:\MTG, type C:, then
- CD \MTG, then MTG to run the program; MTG must be started from
- inside its own subdirectory.
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- CHANGING THE SETUP
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- The Main Menu is the 'control center'. The first thing
- you need to do is to select the correct printer and modify a
- few other items, so select 'Change program setup'. From the
- Change Setup menu, select 'Choose a printer'. If your printer
- isn't listed, try the Epson FX-85 or one of the Alternates.
- Try the printer test if you want to make sure everything's OK.
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- You may want to change a few other things in Change
- Setup, such as the letter grade format, default data disk
- location, optional categories, password (registered version
- only), or you may wish to skip these for now. When you're
- finished, press Esc or select 'Return to Main Menu'; the items
- you changed are saved to a configuration file for next time.
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- STARTING A NEW CLASS
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- You'll need a list of students and preferably a set of
- test scores to complete the rest of this exercise. First, you
- need to decide where the data file will be stored; if the
- current drive and path at the top of the screen are OK, you
- can skip this step. If not, choose a new data drive, then a
- data pathname from the Main Menu. The data path can be set
- permanently at the Change Setup menu so you don't have to go
- through this process every time. If there isn't enough room
- left on the disk you've chosen, you'll hear a couple of beeps
- and the space remaining will appear as yellow lettering on red
- background at the top of the screen. You may need to exit and
- format a fresh disk at this point, or select a different disk.
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- Next, select 'Start a new class' from the Main Menu, then
- select 'Start from scratch'. At the 'Administrative Details'
- screen, fill in the missing information: school name,
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- Page 2 GETGOING.DOC
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- telephone number (could be your office number, school's front
- office, Guidance, etc.), course name, and course description.
- Use upper and lower case when you enter the information and be
- sure it's accurate; it is printed at the top of many of the
- reports. When all information has been entered, you can
- select 'Advance to the Edit screens'.
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- ENTERING DATA
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- The cursor begins in the upper left corner of the screen,
- about three rows down. This is where the first student name
- goes. Data can be entered in two ways; either type directly
- into the space (cell), or press the space bar first, which
- brings up an edit box. The edit box is useful in that it
- shows you exactly what kind of data (student name, test name,
- date, etc.) is expected -- you may wish to try it now.
- Pressing Esc while in an edit box erases anything you've
- entered and pressing Esc again closes the box.
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- Type the first name on your list into the first cell, in
- last name, comma, first name format, using upper and lower
- case (any way you like really, but use a consistent format).
- When finished, press the down-arrow cursor key (if you don't
- have a separate cursor keypad, you'll have to turn off Num
- Lock and use the upper row to enter numbers). This moves the
- cursor down to the next cell where you enter the next name on
- your list. Don't worry about alphabetical order; the names
- can easily be sorted later. Twenty names fit on the left side
- of the screen. Press down-arrow when you reach the bottom and
- continue down the right side, forty students maximum.
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- When you've entered all the names, press and hold down
- Alt, and press A. A box pops up offering different ways to
- arrange (sort) the student names. Choose 'Arrange By Student
- Name'. Next press Alt-S to save the file; it's a good idea to
- save a data file every twenty minutes or so just in case you
- kick the plug out of the wall or something.
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- Press the Home key, which takes you to the top of the
- screen right beside 'Test:'. Type in a name for the test for
- which you are entering scores, maximum six characters. 'Test'
- here represents any assignment. Numbering them is useful, so
- you might want to call it Test.1, Lab.1, Essay1, HmWk.1, for
- example. Next, move to the large cell just to the right where
- it says 'Topic:' and enter a test description. This can be
- something like 'Unit 1: Cell Structure', '2000 words on global
- warming', or '20 multiple choice questions'. Move to the next
- row just to the right of 'Max:' and enter the score this test
- is begin marked out of; because all percentages will be
- calculated for you, there's no real need to have 'tidy'
- maximum scores -- a maximum score of 97 involves no more work
- on your part than 100.
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- GETGOING.DOC Page 3
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- Next, move all the way to the left and enter a weight for
- this test. If you're not sure how much it should be weighted,
- stick with a relatively small percentage for now. In general
- a quiz would be 1% or 2%, a test worth perhaps 5%, term paper
- 10%-15%; they can be changed at any time. The total weight
- need never be 100%; MTG can still calculate averages. You may
- also use the 'total marks' format in which each test is
- weighted solely on its maximum score compared with the sum of
- all maximum scores; to use total marks, just don't enter any
- weights. The manual goes into much more detail on weights,
- and you should read this section carefully. There is also a
- discussion on weighting by category at the end of the
- WHATSNEW.V21 file you might find useful.
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- Move to the right now and put the cursor on 'TDate:'
- which stands for 'Test Date'. This will likely be the date
- the marks are entered, but it could be the due date or date
- assigned. Rather than enter a date, press the space bar
- instead. Today's date appears, and you can press Tab to
- change the date format, or press Esc and enter your own date.
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- You can now enter the raw score for each student. Move
- the cursor into the first column to the right of the student
- name column, under the maximum score. Raw scores can contain
- one decimal place, and may exceed the maximum score if you
- wish to give extra credit. A 'no score' can be assigned
- instead of zero by typing in an asterisk (as you can see, this
- is the default before any scores are entered). 'No scores'
- are simply removed from all calculations rather than count as
- zero, and are preferable to zeros for reasons explained in the
- manual; they can always be converted to zero at the end of
- semester. As each raw score is entered, the percentage
- appears immediately to the right under 'Per', and the over-all
- weighted average in the next column under 'SAvg' (for the
- first test, this will be identical to the test percentage).
- In the upper left corner appears the test average (TAvg).
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- When all raw scores have been entered, you can sort on
- the results of this test. Press Alt-A again, and select
- 'Arrange By Results Of xxxxxx'. This is a good time to save
- the file again by pressing Alt-S.
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- Move the cursor so it's on the test name, and press Alt-
- G. This gives you a histogram of test scores and is useful
- for getting a better idea of the distribution of scores; note
- the statistics to the right. Press Alt-C to view class
- statistics, then Esc to erase this box.
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- Press Alt-R, which takes you to the Report menu, and
- select Gradebook report. Follow the prompts and print a
- gradebook report. This report completely replaces your paper-
- based gradebook and can be used to print the results of just
- one test, a range of tests, or the whole works. This report
- can then be 3-hole punched and kept in a binder. Notice that
- during the entire process you wrote nothing on a piece of
- paper; the marks go directly from test papers into the
- program.
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- Page 4 GETGOING.DOC
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- WHAT TO DO NEXT
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- After printing the gradebook report, press Alt-Q to quit
- the program, and select 'Quit Making The Grade' twice to exit.
- This is the bare minimum you need to get started with MTG. We
- have barely touched on the many features that make this
- program more than just a scorekeeper. You should next print
- out the manual contained in MTG21.DOC (about 53 pages) if you
- haven't done so already. To print this file, follow these
- steps:
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- The file is in compressed form in a file named
- MTG21DOC.EXE. To decompress it, type MTG21DOC at the prompt,
- which creates a bigger file named MTG21.DOC. Now type
- PRINTDOC at the prompt, and follow the directions given there.
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- You should also read the WHATSNEW.V21 file by typing at
- the prompt BROWSE WHATSNEW.V21. A sample file CHE-3A1! is
- provided for experimentation, and pressing Alt-H or F1 in the
- program brings up a Help screen which summarizes all commands.
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