Graph and Chart Literacy

Read dashboards, news graphics, and business reports with confidence.

line chart

Front

best for showing change over time

Back

pie chart

Front

shows parts of a whole and works best with few categories

Back

histogram

Front

shows the distribution of numeric values

Back

scatter plot

Front

shows the relationship between two variables

Back

box plot

Front

shows median, spread, and outliers

Back

stacked bar chart

Front

shows both totals and composition

Back

choropleth map

Front

shows values across geographic areas

Back

axis labels

Front

tell you what each axis measures

Back

legend

Front

explains colors, symbols, or series

Back

scale

Front

units and spacing change how the graph should be read

Back

truncated axis

Front

can exaggerate differences by not starting from zero

Back

percent vs absolute values

Front

percentages can mislead if raw counts differ a lot

Back

denominator

Front

compare values only when they use a comparable base

Back

trend

Front

the overall direction matters more than one noisy point

Back

outlier

Front

a point far from the rest of the data

Back

correlation vs causation

Front

a relationship does not prove one thing caused the other

Back

sample size note

Front

small samples can produce unstable or misleading patterns

Back

bar chart

Front

best for comparing categories

Back