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Study Plan

The document outlines a 30-day learning plan for data science, divided into four weeks focusing on basics, data manipulation, machine learning, and advanced topics. Each day includes specific learning objectives, resources, and practical exercises to build skills in statistics, programming, data visualization, and analytics. The plan culminates in hands-on projects that integrate SQL, predictive modeling, and data visualization tools.

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2892004sathish
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
2 views

Study Plan

The document outlines a 30-day learning plan for data science, divided into four weeks focusing on basics, data manipulation, machine learning, and advanced topics. Each day includes specific learning objectives, resources, and practical exercises to build skills in statistics, programming, data visualization, and analytics. The plan culminates in hands-on projects that integrate SQL, predictive modeling, and data visualization tools.

Uploaded by

2892004sathish
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Week 1: Understand Basics & Set Up Your Environment

Day 1 (3–4 hours)

1.5 hours: Learn about data science and analytics (videos, articles).

1–1.5 hours: Understand structured vs. unstructured data.

30 minutes: Summarize or review what you’ve learned.

Day 2 (3–4 hours)

2 hours: Learn basics of statistics (mean, median, mode, variance, standard deviation).

1–1.5 hours: Introduction to probability (normal and binomial distributions).

30 minutes: Practice basic calculations in Excel or Python.

Day 3 (3–4 hours)

1.5–2 hours: Study key analytics concepts: correlation, regression, hypothesis testing.

1–1.5 hours: Use resources like Khan Academy or ISLR for examples and practice.

Day 4 (4 hours)

1 hour: Install Anaconda (Python) or RStudio and set up the environment.

1.5 hours: Learn basic syntax: variables, loops, functions.

1.5 hours: Hands-on coding exercises (e.g., Codecademy, DataCamp)


Day 5 (4 hours)

2 hours: Explore Python (Pandas, NumPy) or R (Tidyverse).

2 hours: Work on small datasets to apply your learning.

Day 6 (4 hours)

2 hours: Learn visualization basics using Python (Matplotlib, Seaborn) or R (ggplot2).

2 hours: Create simple plots using practice datasets.

Day 7 (3 hours)

3 hours: Practice and consolidate your knowledge using Kaggle, DataCamp, or


Codecademy introductory courses.

Week 2: Data Manipulation & Visualization

Day 8 (4 hours)

2 hours: Learn data cleaning techniques (handle missing values, duplicates, outliers).

2 hours: Practice data cleaning with a small dataset.

Day 9 (4 hours)

2 hours: Learn data transformation (filtering, merging, reshaping).

2 hours: Practice using Python/R on small datasets.


Day 10 (4 hours)

2 hours: Learn feature engineering basics.

2 hours: Hands-on feature engineering using Kaggle datasets.

Day 11 (3–4 hours)

2 hours: Learn visualization types (bar charts, histograms, scatter plots).

1–2 hours: Practice creating visualizations.

Day 12 (3–4 hours)

2 hours: Explore box plots and storytelling principles for visualizations.

1–2 hours: Create visualizations based on practice datasets.

Day 13 (4 hours)

2 hours: Hands-on: Create visualizations using Python/R.

2 hours: Explore resources like “Storytelling with Data.”

Day 14 (2 hours)

1 hour: Summarize key concepts from Week 2.

1 hour: Revise challenging areas or practice more.


Week 3: Machine Learning & Basic Analytics

Day 15 (4 hours)

2 hours: Learn supervised vs. unsupervised learning.

2 hours: Watch tutorials or practice small exercises.

Day 16 (4 hours)

2 hours: Study common algorithms like linear regression and logistic regression.

2 hours: Implement a simple regression model in Python/R.

Day 17 (4 hours)

2 hours: Learn decision trees and K-Means clustering.

2 hours: Build simple models using Scikit-learn or caret.

Day 18 (3–4 hours)

1.5–2 hours: Learn descriptive analytics (what happened).

1.5–2 hours: Perform exploratory data analysis (EDA) on a dataset.

Day 19 (3–4 hours)

1.5–2 hours: Study predictive analytics (what will happen).

1.5–2 hours: Practice building predictive models on real datasets


Day 20 (3–4 hours)

1.5–2 hours: Study prescriptive analytics (what to do).

1.5–2 hours: Implement EDA and summarize insights.

Day 21 (2–3 hours)

1–1.5 hours: Review and consolidate machine learning and analytics concepts.

1–1.5 hours: Practice exercises or revise weak areas.

Week 4: Advanced Topics & Projects

Day 22 (4 hours)

2 hours: Learn SQL basics (SELECT, WHERE, GROUP BY).

2 hours: Practice SQL queries using online platforms (Mode Analytics, LeetCode).

Day 23 (4 hours)

2 hours: Study advanced SQL (JOIN, subqueries).

2 hours: Practice with advanced queries.

Day 24 (3–4 hours)

2 hours: Learn to connect SQL with Python/R.


1–2 hours: Practice running SQL queries and analyzing results.

Day 25 (4–5 hours)

2 hours: Select a dataset (e.g., Titanic survival, customer churn).

2–3 hours: Clean and explore the dataset.

Day 26 (4–5 hours)

2 hours: Visualize insights using learned tools (Matplotlib, ggplot2).

2–3 hours: Enhance visualizations and document insights.

Day 27 (4–5 hours)

2 hours: Build a predictive model using the dataset.

2–3 hours: Test and optimize the model.

Day 28 (4–5 hours)

2 hours: Document findings in a report or presentation.

2–3 hours: Finalize visualizations and summaries

Day 29 (3–4 hours)

2 hours: Learn Excel (pivot tables, charts).

1–2 hours: Practice creating Excel dashboards.


Day 30 (3–4 hours)

2 hours: Learn Tableau or Power BI basics.

1–2 hours: Create a visualization dashboard.

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