Okay so here we go:
1) You boil for 1 hour at whatever temperatures your elevation and atmospheric pressure allow. You want a good rolling boil, not a wimpy boil. You don't have to go nuts, just keep it rolling.
2) You cool that down with an ice bath or wort chiller when its done boiling.
3) Transfer to fermenter when it gets down to 65. Make sure this fermenter is sanitized. Star san is best. A powder cleaner usually requires a few rinsings; don't skimp on the rinsings here.
4) Pitch your yeast. If the package/instructions say re-hydrate do so.
5) Put on your air lock (sanitized) or blow off tube. Blowoff tubes can be googled; use google to find out how to make one. They will always be handy and you will likely need one.
6) Ferment for ~3 weeks. Don't bottle early because bubbles have stopped. Bottle after 3 weeks. Or use your hydrometer to get a reading of the finished gravity. Readings should be done between 2-3 weeks of fermenting. The same reading 3 days in a row means you are ready to bottle.
7) Boil sugar in 1 cup of water. Use this calculator to see how much:
http://www.northernbrewer.com/priming-sugar-calculator/. The calculator is self explanatory. Boil the sugar in 1 cup of water.
8) Pour this water/sugar into sanitized bottling bucket. Sanitize racking can and siphon. Use these to add beer from fermenter to bottling bucket. It will pour on top of your sugar solution. You want this to mix well. Allow it to whirlpool, then mix gently with a sanitized spoon.
9) Then simply bottle in your sanitized bottles. A bottling wand will be great here. I suggest getting one if you don't have one.
10) Store these at ~70F for 3 weeks before opening. Chill them first obviously. They are best chilled for a few days before serving.
11) Pour into a glass, leave the last inch with the sediment in the bottle.
12) Enjoy.