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Class 1 Computer Chapter 6 Using a Keyboard - Free Printable

Class 1 Computer Chapter 6 Using a Keyboard

Educational worksheet: Class 1 Computer Chapter 6 Using a Keyboard. Download and print for classroom or home learning activities.

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Show Answer Key & Explanations Step-by-step solution for: Class 1 Computer Chapter 6 Using a Keyboard
Let’s solve each part step by step.

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Part A (questions 5 and 7):

These are fill-in-the-blank questions about keyboard keys.

- Question 5: “To move cursor to preset location”
→ This usually refers to the Home key, which moves the cursor to the beginning of a line or document (a “preset” starting point). Sometimes it could be End, but “preset location” most commonly means Home in basic computer classes.

- Question 7: “To write capital letters”
→ You use the Shift key (hold it while pressing a letter) OR the Caps Lock key (to lock all letters as capitals). Since the question says “to write capital letters” without specifying temporary or permanent, both can work — but in Class 1 level, they often expect Caps Lock for writing many capital letters, or Shift for one at a time. Looking at context from Part B and C, we’ll go with Shift because it’s more fundamental and used with every capital letter. But let’s check Part B first — maybe clues there.

Actually, looking ahead — in Part B, we have jumbled words that include “SHIFTKEY”, so likely Question 7 is expecting Shift Key.

But wait — Question 5: “move cursor to preset location” — another possibility is Tab? No, Tab indents. Or Enter? No. Actually, in some contexts, “preset location” might mean Home or even Arrow Keys — but arrow keys move freely, not to a *preset* spot.

In early computer education, “preset location” often refers to Home key.

So:

→ Q5: Home Key
→ Q7: Shift Key (since Caps Lock is also an option, but Shift is more universal for single caps)

But let’s hold off finalizing until we do Part B — maybe the jumbled words will confirm.

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Part B: Rearrange jumbled words to make meaningful words.

We need to unscramble these to form real keyboard-related terms.

1. RUMNECIYEKS
Let’s rearrange: Look for common suffixes like “KEYS”.
Try: R U M N E C I Y E K S → remove “KEYS” → left with RUMNIEC? Not good.
Try grouping: Maybe “NUMERIC KEYS”?
NUMERIC = N,U,M,E,R,I,C → yes! Then KEYS = K,E,Y,S → total letters: N,U,M,E,R,I,C,K,E,Y,S → matches RUMNECIYEKS? Let’s count:

Original: R U M N E C I Y E K S → 11 letters
“NUMERIC KEYS” = 8 + 4 = 12? Wait no — “NUMERIC” is 7, “KEYS” is 4 → 11 letters. Yes!

Check: N,U,M,E,R,I,C → that’s 7
K,E,Y,S → 4 → total 11.

Now arrange original: R,U,M,N,E,C,I,Y,E,K,S

Can we get N,U,M,E,R,I,C,K,E,Y,S?

Yes: Take N, U, M, E, R, I, C → then K, E, Y, S.

So: NUMERIC KEYS

Correct.

2. HISFTYEK
Letters: H,I,S,F,T,Y,E,K → 8 letters
Try: “SHIFT KEY” → S,H,I,F,T → 5; K,E,Y → 3 → total 8. Perfect.

Arrange: S,H,I,F,T,K,E,Y → from HISFTYEK → yes, possible.

So: SHIFT KEY

Confirms our answer for Q7 above!

3. LEDETEYEK
L,E,D,E,T,E,Y,E,K → 9 letters
Try: “DELETE KEY” → D,E,L,E,T,E → 6; K,E,Y → 3 → total 9.

D,E,L,E,T,E,K,E,Y → from L,E,D,E,T,E,Y,E,K → yes, same letters.

So: DELETE KEY



4. PSACLKOC
P,S,A,C,L,K,O,C → 8 letters
Try: “CAPS LOCK” → C,A,P,S → 4; L,O,C,K → 4 → total 8.

C,A,P,S,L,O,C,K → from P,S,A,C,L,K,O,C → yes.

So: CAPS LOCK



5. NUFCITONYEKS
N,U,F,C,I,T,O,N,Y,E,K,S → 12 letters
Try: “FUNCTION KEYS” → F,U,N,C,T,I,O,N → 8; K,E,Y,S → 4 → total 12.

F,U,N,C,T,I,O,N,K,E,Y,S → from given: N,U,F,C,I,T,O,N,Y,E,K,S → yes, same letters.

So: FUNCTION KEYS



Great! So Part B answers:

1. NUMERIC KEYS
2. SHIFT KEY
3. DELETE KEY
4. CAPS LOCK
5. FUNCTION KEYS

This confirms that for Question 7 (“To write capital letters”), the expected answer is Shift Key (since “Shift Key” appears here), though “Caps Lock” also works — but since “Shift Key” is listed in the jumble, and it’s more directly associated with typing individual capitals, we’ll go with that.

For Question 5: “To move cursor to preset location” — now that we see “Numeric Keys”, “Function Keys”, etc., perhaps “Home Key” isn’t among them. Is there a better fit?

Wait — actually, none of the jumbled words relate to navigation keys except maybe indirectly.

But in standard Class 1 curriculum:

- To move cursor to beginning of line → Home
- To move to end → End
- Preset location? Could also be Tab? Unlikely.

Another thought: In some systems, “preset location” might refer to Enter (moves to next line start)? But Enter doesn’t move to a *preset* location — it creates new line.

Actually, rethinking: The only key that moves cursor to a fixed/preset position (like top-left or start of line) is Home.

And since “Home Key” isn’t in the jumbles, but the question is separate, we stick with Home Key.

Alternatively, could it be Arrow Keys? But those aren’t “preset” — they’re directional.

I think Home Key is correct.

But let’s double-check common textbook answers for this level.

Upon recall: In many Indian CBSE/State board Class 1 Computer Science books:

- “Key to move cursor to beginning of line” → Home
- “Key to type capital letters” → Shift or Caps Lock — but since “Shift Key” appeared in jumble, and it’s more precise for single capitals, we’ll use Shift Key

So:

→ Q5: Home Key
→ Q7: Shift Key

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Part C: Mark names of five keys. One is done (Control key).

We need to pick any four other keys from the keyboard diagram and label them.

Looking at the diagram (even though we don’t describe image, we know standard layout):

Common keys to label:

- Esc
- Tab
- Caps Lock
- Shift
- Enter
- Spacebar
- Backspace
- Delete
- Arrow keys
- Function keys (F1-F12)
- Num Lock
- Scroll Lock
- Pause/Break
- Print Screen
- Insert
- Home
- Page Up
- End
- Page Down

Since Control key is already labeled (bottom left), we can choose:

Example selections:

1. Esc (top left)
2. Tab (below Esc)
3. Caps Lock (left side, below Tab)
4. Shift (left and right sides)
5. Enter (right side, big key)

Or simpler ones for Class 1:

- Spacebar (big bar at bottom center)
- Backspace (top right of main area)
- Delete (near Backspace)
- Arrow keys (cluster on right)
- F1 (first function key)

Any five distinct keys besides Control are fine.

Since the instruction says “Mark the names”, and one is done, we just list four more.

But note: The task says “Mark the names of five keys. One is done for you.” So we need to provide labels for four additional keys.

In written response, we can say:

You can mark:

- Esc key
- Tab key
- Caps Lock key
- Shift key
- Enter key

(Choose any four besides Control)

But since we must give final answer, we’ll list four common ones.

Actually, to match simplicity for Class 1, let’s pick:

1. Esc
2. Tab
3. Caps Lock
4. Shift
5. Enter

(Control is already marked, so these are the other five — but wait, the task says “mark five keys, one is done”, so we need to name four more? Or five including the example? Re-read:

“Mark the names of five keys. One is done for you.”

That means: Total five keys to mark, but one (Control) is already shown as example. So student needs to mark four more.

But in answer format, we should list the four additional keys to mark.

However, sometimes teachers expect students to identify five keys total, with one given. So in final answer, we can list four more.

But to be safe, let’s list five keys including Control? No — the instruction implies: you have to mark five, but one is already done (so you do four).

But in the blank spaces? There are no blanks shown in text — it’s a diagram. So in written response, we just state which keys to label.

Given that, for Final Answer, we’ll provide:

For Part A:
5. Home Key
7. Shift Key

For Part B:
1. NUMERIC KEYS
2. SHIFT KEY
3. DELETE KEY
4. CAPS LOCK
5. FUNCTION KEYS

For Part C:
Label any four of: Esc, Tab, Caps Lock, Shift, Enter, Spacebar, Backspace, etc. We’ll pick four simple ones.

Let’s finalize.

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Final verification:

Part A:
- Q5: Move cursor to preset location → Home Key
- Q7: Write capital letters → Shift Key (confirmed by Part B having "SHIFT KEY")

Part B: All unscrambled correctly

Part C: Any four keys besides Control — we’ll choose common ones.

──────────────────────────────────────

Final Answer:
A.
5. Home Key
7. Shift Key

B.
1. NUMERIC KEYS
2. SHIFT KEY
3. DELETE KEY
4. CAPS LOCK
5. FUNCTION KEYS

C.
Label these four keys (in addition to Control key):
- Esc
- Tab
- Caps Lock
- Shift
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of computer keyboard worksheet.
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