EDT has been the tool used by VMS programmer for creating source code file for over four decades. In what way is it not a legit question for SO?
The problem you report isn't anything to do with the EDT program, but in communicating with it via OpenVMS emulated in a virtual machine, which also entails emulating a VT100 terminal. The way that your emulation environment maps keys from your physical keyboard to VT100 commands has nothing to do with that program. Not only does this have nothing to do with EDT, it probably has nothing to do with (Open)VMS, either.
Most old, highly-upvoted questions about Vim would probably not be accepted today. On-topic questions about tools used by programmers are questions about tools used particularly by programmers, and particularly about using them for the task of programming. A text editor can be used by any computer user to edit any text file; it doesn't inherently have anything to do with programming.
Even if this were on topic, the question is quite poorly asked. We expect copied and pasted, properly formatted text, not screenshots of terminal contents; and it's way too much. If you want to convince us that "The help on VMS... does not identify useful info" (by the way, that's simply not correct English, and native speakers may struggle to understand what you meant), we don't need to see an image of all the information it is giving you. (Telling us what you tried is not about "deserving" an answer.)
Beyond formatting and content issues, the question is unclear: have you actually determined a need to "get the mapping for a PC keyboard"? How? For example, the help suggests that you should be able to use ctrl-E to increase indent level. What happens if you try actually just pressing that anyway, and how is that different? Keep in mind that depending on your setup, the issue might not just be with VT-100 terminal emulation, but with actually sending the key to the host OS (rather than the virtualization software).
In conclusion: please carefully rethink your question, and then try it on https://unix.stackexchange.com instead, after first checking existing Q&A to see if the underlying issues have been addressed already. Make sure that you have identified a concrete problem, and that you know where it is (e.g., pressing one keyboard combination sends something different to the program; or the keyboard combination you want to send to the program is captured by some intervening process - whether that's VirtualBox, xterm/GNOME Terminal/etc., or something else).