Greg defined it. We could likely match our collections of hand-held meters. Mine live in storage, too.
With your camera, the built-in meter is likely as, or even more accurate, than a hand-held external one for anything you will likely encounter. It is "calibrated" for the camera's sensor. You can set it to read anything from the entire frame, to spot-reading a small area of it.
A better learning tool (and a LOT less dollars!) would be to get an 18% gray card and use that, in conjunction with the camera's meter to get a good reading. To get a fair understanding of what the different variables do, start with the camera in manual, card in the same lighting as the subject, aim the camera at the card (Doesn't even need to be in focus), dial the possible variables to get the "0" of the camera's meter in line, depending on whether you want DoF to be deep or shallow (by setting aperture first), and whether the subject is moving or not (using shutter to stop motion first). Better to set your ISO at something like 400 or 800 as a "constant" to start with and work inside that constraint... and even though your DSLR is capable of some really amazing things itself, there are still some limitations and compromises that revert back to basics.