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Explore Stenography Basics

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Student & School Resources

Explore Stenography Basics

New to stenography? Start here. Learn what steno is, how court reporting and captioning work, what a steno writer does, and how students usually begin training.

Start Here

What is stenography?

Stenography is a fast, sound-based method of writing spoken words using a special machine called a steno writer. Instead of typing one letter at a time, a stenographer presses multiple keys together to create shorthand strokes that can translate into words, phrases, punctuation, and speaker identification.

Simple version: a stenographer listens, writes in machine shorthand, and uses software to turn those strokes into readable English.

Where steno skills are used

Legal

Court Reporting

Court reporters create an accurate record of legal proceedings, including trials, depositions, hearings, and sworn testimony.

Media

Captioning

Captioners provide live captions for television, online events, classes, meetings, conferences, and broadcasts.

Accessibility

CART Services

CART, or Communication Access Realtime Translation, provides realtime text access for people who are deaf or hard of hearing.

The Basics

How does a steno machine work?

A steno writer has fewer keys than a regular keyboard, but it is built for speed. Students press combinations of keys at the same time. These combinations are called strokes. The strokes are then translated by CAT software into English.

Standard Steno Keyboard Layout

This simplified layout shows the letters students see on a traditional steno keyboard. The left side is written mostly with the left hand, the right side with the right hand, and the vowels sit below.

Left Hand
Right Hand
S
T
P
H
*
F
P
L
T
D
S
K
W
R
*
R
B
G
S
Z
Vowels
A
O
E
U

Note: This is an educational diagram of the standard steno keyboard layout. Actual writer models may vary slightly in key shape, spacing, display, and features.

1

Write by sound

Students learn to write the sounds of words instead of spelling every word letter by letter.

2

Build outlines

A word, phrase, or punctuation mark may be written as one stroke or a short series of strokes.

3

Translate to English

CAT software translates the shorthand into readable text, helping students eventually write realtime.

What students usually learn first

Step One

Keyboard Layout

Beginners start by learning the steno keyboard, hand position, and how key combinations are formed.

Step Two

Steno Theory

Theory is the shorthand system that teaches students how to write sounds, endings, briefs, punctuation, and phrases.

Step Three

Speedbuilding

After theory, students practice dictation to build speed, accuracy, endurance, and confidence.

Common beginner terms

Term
What it means
Steno Writer
The machine used to write stenographic shorthand.
Stroke
A group of keys pressed at the same time.
Theory
The shorthand system a student learns before speedbuilding.
Brief
A short steno outline used to write a longer word or phrase quickly.
Realtime
Clean translation that appears almost instantly as the stenographer writes.

Free or low-cost ways to try stenography

Before buying equipment or enrolling in a full court reporting program, many beginners start with an introductory program.

Intro Program

NCRA A to Z®

A beginner-friendly program designed to introduce students to steno and help them decide if court reporting or captioning is a good fit.

Learn About A to Z
Basic Training

Project Steno

Project Steno introduces students to machine shorthand and the career possibilities in court reporting and captioning.

Visit Project Steno
Equipment Help

StenoWorks Guidance

Not sure whether to rent, buy, or wait? We can help match your stage of training with a practical equipment option.

Ask for Help
Beginner Equipment

Do you need a machine right away?

It depends on your course or school. Some introductory programs may provide guidance or temporary options, while most formal court reporting programs require a student writer. Before buying, always check your school’s requirements.

If you are just exploring

  • Try an intro program first.
  • Ask whether a rental writer is accepted.
  • Avoid overspending too soon.

If you are enrolling in school

  • Confirm your school’s equipment list.
  • Choose a reliable student writer.
  • Make sure accessories are included.

Which student path sounds like you?

New

I’m only curious right now

Start with a beginner intro program and learn the basics before making a big equipment decision.

Explore Basic Training Rentals →
Current Student

I’m enrolled or enrolling soon

Review your school’s equipment list and choose a reliable student writer that fits your program.

Shop Student Writers →
Need Help

I need help choosing

Tell us your school, program, budget, and timeline. We’ll point you toward the right option.

Contact StenoWorks →
Next Step

Not sure what you need?

Tell us where you are in your steno journey and we’ll help point you to the right program, writer, rental, or resource.

Why Students Choose StenoWorks

Trusted by schools nationwide
Student-friendly pricing & programs
Expert in-house technicians
Real people, real support

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