Did a college course around 1980, stock control and double entry book keeping, this would have been on the very cusp of change I think, we learned how to use various accounting machines and commercial filing systems, but star of the show was a commodore pet. Shortly after that typewriters started to disappear and it was all wordstar on DOS, Lotus 123 and Dbase, all on dos loaded up from floppy discs which actually were floppy. Pity the poor sods who signed up to a course in typewriter maintenance.Ha! Sent me off down another rabbit hole about slide rules. My class must have been one of the last that had to buy and be taught how to use a slide rule. I still have it but have forgotten how to use it.
We also used Comptrollers - a desk-based mechanical add/subtract machine, based I think on the Cruk drum calculator Seagull refers to. Looked like a cross between shop till and a typewriter. Like typing pools, big firms had comptroller pools of girls (no boys allowed).
It seems when I was still at school history was being made, and there was a step change in methods of caclulating. Use of slide rules and Compt's went in the bin, with the invention of the Hewlett Packard scientific calculator and the Texas Instruments cheaper version. By the last year in school we all had bought cheap texas instruments pocket calculators.