
Introduction
Self
Introduction
Self
6 Areas
Information and
Data Literacy
Introduction
Communication
Introduction
Collaboration
Introduction
Digital Content
Creation
Introduction
Safety
Introduction
Problem Solving
Introduction
Self
Takeaways
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Guidance


Digital Literacy
Personalized guidance report
Digital literacy affects how you learn, work, and navigate daily life. It shapes how you find and manage information, connect with others, create content, stay safe online, and solve problems. This report is based on your responses and reflects how you use digital tools across six core skill areas:
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Information and Data Literacy
Your ability to find, evaluate, and organize digital information.

Communication
Your ability to interact, share content, and engage in digital spaces.

Digital Content Creation
Your ability to create, combine, and respect rights related to digital content.

Safety
Your ability to protect devices, data, well-being, and the environment online.

Problem Solving
Your ability to tackle digital problems and learn new tools and skills.
Information and Data Literacy
This section explains how you search for, evaluate, and organize digital information so you can find what you need, judge its quality, and manage it effectively.
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You assess what you need before you search and adapt your strategy to get better results. You choose the right tools, compare sources, and know when to shift approach. Others may already turn to you for help with online searches.
To develop this skill further, teach someone else how to improve their search habits and reflect on any new tips you discover through the process.
Your personal guidance
Browsing, Searching, and Filtering
Here, we look at how you figure out what you need online and how well you adjust your searches to get better results.
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People vary a lot in how they search online. Some stick to simple search terms and never move past the first result. Others use filters, compare results, or try different tools until they find exactly what they need. Skilled searchers adjust as they go and know how to get better results with less effort. Understanding these differences helps you collaborate more smoothly and guide others without overwhelming them.
Understanding others


You go beyond the basics and assess sources in detail. You help others evaluate content and suggest better ways to check reliability. You adjust your strategy depending on the topic and regularly spot bias or misleading claims.
To maintain and grow this skill, regularly review your evaluation habits and update your approach in response to new trends or types of misinformation.
Your personal guidance
Evaluating Digital Information
Here, we look at how you judge what’s credible online and how you decide which sources to trust.
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Not everyone uses the same approach to judging online information. Some people rely on gut feelings or familiar websites. Others look deeper, checking authors, cross-referencing claims, and spotting patterns. The most advanced users adapt their approach depending on what they’re researching. Knowing these differences can help you offer support without criticism and encourage more thoughtful discussions online and in person.
Understanding others


You organize and manage digital content in structured systems and can explain your approach to others. You move easily between platforms and suggest practical data management strategies to others. Your habits support both efficiency and clarity.
To continue developing this skill, document your system and share a short guide with others.
Your personal guidance
Managing Data, Information, and Digital Content
Here, we look at how well you organize, store, structure, and retrieve data, information, and digital content across platforms such as websites and cloud storage.
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People vary in how they manage digital information. Some can only save and locate basic files without a clear system. Others organize, store, and retrieve content with moderate structure. Highly skilled individuals create efficient systems, move smoothly across platforms, and guide others in managing data. Recognizing these differences helps you set realistic expectations, support others without frustration, and continue strengthening your own digital organization skills.
Understanding others
Communication
This section explores how you interact with others online, share content clearly, and take part in digital communities using the right tools and tone.
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You select digital tools strategically, adapt your tone to the audience, and share content with clear attribution. You move smoothly across platforms and help others choose tools and apply proper credit. Your approach strengthens communication and teamwork.
To continue developing this skill, create a short example guide that shows how to choose platforms and credit sources effectively.
Your personal guidance
Sharing and Using Digital Tools
Here, we look at how you choose digital platforms to communicate, share content clearly, and give proper credit when using other people’s work.
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People vary in how they communicate and share content online. Some rely on familiar tools and might overlook tone, format, or attribution. Others choose platforms carefully and give clear credit when using someone else’s work. Highly skilled individuals adapt tools, message style, and sharing methods to fit the context and guide others in doing the same. Recognizing these differences helps you respond with patience, set clear expectations, and support stronger digital collaboration.
Understanding others


You can guide others in using digital services. You explore different options, understand privacy risks, and adjust your approach to meet the requirements of each service.
To continue developing this skill, help someone else sign up for or navigate a service they've never used before.
Your personal guidance
Engaging in Digital Citizenship
Here, we look at how you use digital tools to participate in public life and access important services like health care or education.
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Digital citizenship looks different for everyone. Some people avoid online services unless they are required. Others use them often but might miss key features. The most confident users explore services, understand the benefits and risks, and help others navigate them too. These differences shape how well people access support, education, or opportunities. Recognizing this can help you encourage others, share what you’ve learned, and promote greater access in your community or workplace.
Understanding others
Collaboration
This section considers how you use digital tools to work with others, contribute to shared projects, follow online norms, and manage your digital identity.
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You collaborate actively in digital spaces, share updates, give feedback, and help others stay engaged.
To continue developing this skill, invite someone newer to a tool you use and show them how to contribute or stay involved.
Your personal guidance
Collaborating Using Digital Tools
Here, we look at how you use shared digital spaces to co-create, contribute, and build things with others.
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People show up differently in digital collaboration. Some stay quiet or only react to prompts. Others jump in quickly and drive group work forward. Not everyone is comfortable co-creating, and many need a clear structure or encouragement to share their ideas. Supporting people where they are—by offering simple entry points or guiding them through the platform—can make teamwork smoother and more inclusive.
Understanding others


You adapt your communication style to different platforms and audiences. You help others feel respected and included online.
To grow this skill, support someone else in navigating tone or norms in a digital space that's new to them.
Your personal guidance
Netiquette
Here, we look at how well you follow digital norms and adjust how you communicate in different online settings.
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People bring different habits, comfort levels, and communication styles to digital spaces. Some may write bluntly without meaning offense. Others may avoid saying what they think out of caution. Strong digital communicators know when to be clear, when to hold back, and how to show respect across cultures and generations. Adjusting to others and helping them adapt builds stronger digital relationships.
Understanding others


You manage multiple identities well and protect your reputation across platforms. You help others stay safe and intentional online.
To continue developing this skill, help a friend or colleague clean up or secure one of their digital profiles.
Your personal guidance
Managing Digital Identity
Here, we look at how you manage your online presence, control your reputation, and protect your personal data.
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Digital identity is personal. Some people share freely and don't think much about the long-term effects of revealing their digital identity. Others are very cautious and tightly control what they share. The most skilled users make clear choices, protect their reputations, and support others in doing the same. Knowing where someone stands can help you have more respectful and productive conversations about privacy, presence, and professionalism online.
Understanding others
Digital Content Creation
This section explores how you create and edit digital content, combine and rework ideas from others, and apply copyright or licensing rules appropriately.
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You create digital content across formats and platforms, adjusting your approach to suit your audience and goals.
To continue developing this skill, share a short tutorial with someone else or document your content process step by step.
Your personal guidance
Developing Content
Here, we look at how you use digital tools to create or edit content and express your ideas.
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People have different levels of comfort with content creation. Some stick with text and basic visuals, while others experiment across formats or platforms. Highly skilled users match the format to the message and regularly explore new tools. Offering encouragement and examples can help others feel more confident expressing themselves in digital spaces.
Understanding others


You regularly create new content by refining, adapting, and blending materials from multiple sources.
To grow this skill, coach someone else through the process of improving or integrating content in their next project.
Your personal guidance
Integrating and Reworking Digital Content
Here, we look at how you combine or adapt existing content to create something new and meaningful.
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Some people treat content as static and avoid editing or remixing. Others build on existing work to improve clarity or add new perspectives. Skilled users integrate sources while respecting their original intent. Helping others learn how to revise, reuse, and adapt content is key to making digital work more collaborative and creative.
Understanding others


You understand basic rules about copyright and licensing and try to follow them in your work.
To build this skill, try using Creative Commons search tools and read how each license allows different types of reuse.
Your personal guidance
Copyright and Licenses
Here, we look at how well you understand and apply rules around ownership, reuse, and sharing of digital content.
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Not everyone understands what they can or can’t use online. Some don’t know how to check licensing, while others follow rules carefully. Skilled users know how to credit others and choose the right license for their own work. Sharing resources or clarifying rules in group projects can prevent mistakes and encourage ethical content creation.
Understanding others


You can create simple sequences or routines that guide systems to solve problems or automate tasks.
To build this skill, start with a small task you want to automate or a problem to solve, then learn a beginner-friendly language like Python or use no-code tools like Scratch or Zapier to get familiar with basic logic.
Your personal guidance
Programming
Here, we look at how well you understand and use basic programming or automation to solve problems or conduct tasks.
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People often think programming is beyond their reach. Some avoid it entirely, while others enjoy the challenge of building systems from scratch. Those with strong programming habits often troubleshoot confidently and support others. Creating space for experimentation and providing approachable resources can help others take their first steps into basic coding or automation.
Understanding others
Safety
This section covers how to protect your devices and personal data and reduce the environmental impact of your digital habits.
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You apply basic security steps like using antivirus software, secure passwords, and privacy settings.
To build this skill, add a monthly check to review your devices' security settings or update your passwords.
Your personal guidance
Protecting Devices
Here, we look at how you keep your digital devices safe from viruses, threats, or other risks.
Was the personal guidance helpful?
Thank you, for your feedback!

People manage device safety in very different ways. Some may ignore updates or reuse weak passwords. Others are cautious but may miss new threats or fall behind on best practices. Skilled users stay up to date and help others do the same. Being patient and showing small, useful steps can go further than technical advice alone.
Understanding others


You manage your personal data carefully and avoid oversharing, especially on public platforms.
To build this skill, look up how one of your most-used platforms manages user data and take steps to minimize what is collected.
Your personal guidance
Protecting Personal Data and Privacy
Here, we look at how you manage your personal data and understand how digital services collect and use it.
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People vary in how much they think about personal data. Some assume platforms are safe. Others are cautious but may not know how to manage settings well. Skilled users read between the lines and take control of their data. You can support others by encouraging simple changes and helping them feel more confident in asking questions about data use.
Understanding others


You're mindful of how digital use affects your health and take steps to limit stress, distractions, or harmful content.
To build this skill, try adding more structure to your digital habits, like setting offline times or turning off notifications for one app.
Your personal guidance
Protecting Health and Well-being
Here, we look at how your technology use affects your physical and mental health, and what you do to stay balanced.
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Not everyone has the same awareness or control over how digital use affects their health. Some people burn out or lose track of time. Others are more disciplined but may still struggle with negative content or online conflict. Recognizing where someone is and offering encouragement, structure, or alternatives can help support healthier digital habits for all.
Understanding others


You consider environmental impact in your daily tech habits and encourage others to think about theirs.
To continue developing this skill, lead by example in a group setting or share a simple tip others can easily adopt.
Your personal guidance
Protecting the Environment
Here, we look at how aware you are of the environmental impact of digital technologies and how you act on that knowledge.
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Most people don’t consider how their digital habits impact the environment. Some focus on e-waste or managing cloud storage. More aware users take steps across all devices and behaviors. You can help by sharing practical tips or habits. When they’re simple and clearly explained, they’re more likely to stick.
Understanding others
Problem Solving
This section helps you understand how you troubleshoot digital issues, choose the right tools, think creatively, and build your digital skills over time.
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You solve a wide range of problems independently and often help others figure things out.
To continue developing this skill, challenge yourself to explain one technical fix clearly to someone less confident with tech.
Your personal guidance
Solving Technical Problems
Here, we look at how you recognize and fix technical issues when using digital tools or devices.
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People approach technical problems in different ways. Some feel stuck quickly and look for immediate help. Others try a few solutions and learn through trial and error. Those with strong skills use patterns to troubleshoot efficiently, and they share their knowledge. Helping others means creating space for learning without embarrassment and encouraging curiosity instead of frustration.
Understanding others


You confidently assess your goals and match them to effective digital tools or settings.
To continue developing this skill, help someone else think through what they need and walk them through choosing the right solution.
Your personal guidance
Identifying Needs and Technological Responses
Here, we look at how you recognize what you need and choose the right digital tools or solutions to meet those needs.
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People do not always know what tools are available or which ones work best for their situation. Some use whatever is already familiar, while others explore and compare before choosing. Skilled users often think ahead and adapt their tools to fit their goals. Encouraging others to ask questions, test options, and learn from experience helps build this kind of flexibility.
Understanding others


You regularly find new ways to apply digital tools and help others think creatively about solutions.
To continue developing this skill, host a short brainstorming session or workshop where you share creative problem-solving approaches.
Your personal guidance
Creatively Using Digital Tools
Here, we look at how you use digital tools to think differently, solve problems in new ways, and explore ideas.
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Creativity with digital tools is not always natural. Some users stick to expected patterns while others enjoy testing new ideas or combining tools. Skilled users are comfortable experimenting and often bring fresh energy to problem-solving. You can support others by encouraging small experiments and creating a safe space for people to try and learn from creative risks.
Understanding others


You are aware that you need to improve your digital skills but might feel unsure about where to start.
To strengthen this skill, identify one small area of digital knowledge you want to develop and commit to practicing or reading about it once a week.
Your personal guidance
Identifying Digital Skill Gaps
Here, we look at how you reflect on your digital abilities, identify areas for growth, and take steps to keep learning.
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Not everyone feels confident identifying their own learning needs. Some people may avoid new tools or assume they perform poorly with technology. Others know where they need help and take steps to improve. The most effective learners reflect often about their digital skills and support those around them. Encouraging a growth mindset and sharing your own learning journey makes digital improvement feel possible for everyone.
Understanding others
Takeaways
Your digital skills reflect how you learn, work, and connect with others. This report highlights where you are strong and where you can grow. Focus on one area at a time to build habits, try new tools, and reflect on your progress. Supporting others along the way can deepen your own learning. Being digitally capable is not about knowing everything. It’s about staying open, adaptable, and ready to keep learning as tools and needs change.
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