Motoring0 min ago
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by angel21. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.no angel this is complicated, look and see if they still do Pitmans shorthand.
http://pitmanshorthand.homestead.com/index.htm l
this site may be helpful to you
http://pitmanshorthand.homestead.com/index.htm l
this site may be helpful to you
I taught shorthand/typing/word processing for years and was a senior secretary beforehand. I learned 2 shorthands - Pitmans New Era and Pitmans Script the latter being much easier than Tee line. To touch type takes weeks/months of dedication and practice and can seem quite boring but eventually it all falls into place and you will be able to type with your eyes closed - even in your sleep, same with shorthand. I still do the outlines in my head when people are talking to me occasionally. Good Luck!
Yes it is still in use. I am 38, learned Pitman New Era shorthand at 15, and it is still in demand by top Chairman/CEO's at Blue Chip London companies. I have been a Shorthand PA since leaving school, not many women my age still do it, so I have been lucky to be able to pick which top companies I want to work for, not the other way round, at 18 (20 years ago) I was earning �22,000+ and am now earning �45,000 plus excellent perks & travel, as a PA to the CEO of a major International Insurance Company. I would recommend you learn it !
Yes, but when there is a disciplinary hearing or something equally confidential, dictaphones/recording devices are frowned upon at top companies, and good old-fashioned shorthand is desired. I must admit it did take me about a year of learning to be able to reach 150 wpm though... practice makes perfect as they say...