More from this series:
- EEDL Webinar: Literacy Lookback – What Have We Learned in 2024 About Literacy?
- EEDL Webinar: Quantifying the Value of Data Literacy
- EEDL Webinar: Enterprise Data Literacy — Myth or Reality?
- EEDL Webinar: Analytic Translators – How Do They Fit in the Literacy Discussion?
- EEDL Webinar: Lost in Translation — Why It Takes More Than Literacy to Make Sense of Data
- EEDL Webinar: How Literate Is Literate Enough?
About the Webinar
Ask any data professional and they will agree: The workplace would operate more effectively if everyone understood how to use, produce, interpret, and explain data and the insights they produce.
Even if an organization achieves full agreement to invest in data literacy, significant questions remain: How data-literate are workers now? How will we know when they are sufficiently data-literate?
The truth is there is no single, accepted measure of data literacy. Nor is there a designated set of attributes encompassed by literacy. Assessments range from a few abstract questions about levels of comfort and familiarity, to long, detailed, in-depth, terminology-laden lists of items covering six levels of 18 different capabilities.
In order to gauge progress in data literacy, ironically, we will need better, more consistent data about current levels and changes in literacy.
In this session, we will explore existing metrics and discuss the need for consensus in definitions and measures.
About the Speakers
For over 35 years, Wendy Lynch, PhD has converted complex analytics into business value. At heart, she is a sense-maker and translator. A consultant to numerous Fortune 100 companies, her current work focuses on the application of Big Data solutions in Human Capital Management. Through her roles in diverse work settings—including digital start-ups, century-old insurers, academic medical centers, consulting firms, health care providers and the board room—she became familiar with (and fascinated by) the unique language of each. She also became familiar with the difficult dynamic that often exists between business and analytic teams—preventing them from collaborating effectively. Those experiences led to her true passion of promoting clear and meaningful conversations that produce mutual understanding and success. The result is her new book Become an Analytic Translator, and an online course.
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