Data visualisation: charts
Guidance on how to create and publish accessible charts.
Learn more on Data visualisation: chartsIf you're searching for a two or three word term you need to put it in quotation marks e.g. "analysis function".
Guidance on how to create and publish accessible charts.
Learn more on Data visualisation: chartsMasuma Ahmed blogs about her experience on secondment to the BBC.
Learn more on Ensuring Trust – My secondment to the BBCStatistical coherence is about bringing together outputs on the same topic to better explain the part of the world they describe. This can be across the four countries of the UK where policy making has been devolved (such as in housing or health) or where multiple producers are publishing statistics on the same topic (such […]
Learn more on Coherence of statisticsThe following guidance sets out how to collect and report statistics about loneliness to ensure statistics about this topic are as comparable as possible across government.
Learn more on Loneliness harmonised standardWhen did you join the Civil Service and what was your job? I joined the Civil service in 2001 though an external recruitment from the Office for National Statistics. I joined as a researcher (HEO) and subsequently I joined the GES Fast Stream in 2004. What do you do in your current role and when […]
Learn more on Career story: Vanna AldinVote for your Analysis in Government People's Choice Award winner 2023.
Learn more on People’s Choice Award for the third annual Analysis in Government Awards (AiG Awards)When code lets you down Most statistical publications are updated on a scheduled basis when new data becomes available. Usually the code will run perfectly, but sometimes it will break. The code didn’t change, so what went wrong? The data changed Other people’s code changed Data changes all the time, which is why your RAP […]
Learn more on Dependency and reproducibilityThe housing and planning statistics work programme for 2019 to 2020 was finalised on 6 March 2020. This page was last updated on: Tuesday 14 December 2021
Learn more on 2019 to 2020 work programmeVote for your Fourth Analysis in Government People's Choice Award winner.
Learn more on Voting opens for the People’s Choice Award in the Fourth Analysis in Government (AiG) AwardsWe’ve had another full week of Analysis in Government Month, with some fantastic events to reflect on. Here’s a short re-cap if you missed anything: Hackathon 2.0 We jointly hosted a Hackathon with the Office for National Statistics Data Science Campus as part of their Government Data Science Festival, which was a really great demonstration of […]
Learn more on Highlights from the second week of Analysis in Government Month 2022