Start Here: Data Literacy Fundamentals
Six short stops from “what is literacy?” to dataset documentation—sequenced for first-time readers.
Open the fundamentals pathReading-first · static reference
Data Literacy Starter is a calm, editorial hub for beginners, students, educators, and public-sector teams. Explore three topic pillars, follow a starter path, look up terms in the glossary, and browse curated toolkits and case studies—no accounts, no courses, no dashboards.
Each hub summarizes the theme, links guides, surfaces glossary terms, and points to curated external references.
Definitions, evidence habits, ethics, and how to question numbers you did not collect.
Read charts with a checklist: axes, baselines, units, and common distortions.
Documentation, grain, validation, and quality dimensions before analysis begins.
Six short stops from “what is literacy?” to dataset documentation—sequenced for first-time readers.
Open the fundamentals pathConnect accurate figures to clear narratives, uncertainty, and audience-appropriate visuals.
Open the storytelling pathThe ability to read, interpret, question, and communicate about data in context.
A structured collection of values—often rows and columns—that can be analyzed or visualized.
Data about data: who collected it, when, how, definitions of fields, and limitations.
How well data fits its intended use across dimensions like accuracy, completeness, and timeliness.
A measurable attribute that can differ across records or time (for example, age or revenue).
A single recorded instance—often one row—representing an entity at a point in time.
Federal case studies illustrating how agencies build practical data skills.
Modular materials for teaching and learning foundational data literacy.
State-level orientation to data literacy expectations and resources.
Curated activities and readings for classrooms and informal learning.
Federal open data catalog for practice reading metadata and documentation.
Numbers show up in budgets, grants, dashboards, and headlines. Literacy is the bridge between a chart on a slide and a fair decision in the room. Use the What is data literacy? guide for a compact definition, then continue into asking better questions and data quality checks when you are ready to go deeper.