Abstract
Data literacy is the ability to search, read, understand, create and communicate with data; to ask the right questions about the data; to know what can or cannot be said; to explain a story, or better, provide insights with data, in the form of infographics or other visually appealing elements. The respective knowledge profile can be referred to as that of a data scientist.
Within policy-making a key question is what role the data scientist, working with or for policy-makers, should play. Moreover, the skills and capabilities they should master are crucial to understanding, for instance, what type of information policy-makers need, or what is the right format to communicate data and statistics to them. Likewise, for policy-makers it is important to recognise the skills needed to understand the messages deriving from data, and how data scientists can help them to understand such data.
This article gives a practitioner’s view on data literacy for policy-making. It highlights the steps that a data scientist follows to communicate insights from data and statistics in the form of data visualisation and infographics. It looks at the tasks performed by a data scientist when preparing such papers. The ability to undertake such tasks can be regarded as essential skills or know-how to help those who cannot work effectively with data.
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