GOVTALENT.UK

Data and Insights Analyst, Social Housing and Resettlement Directorate

This opening expired 6 months ago.

Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities

Location(s):
Birmingham, Bristol, Darlington, Leeds, London, Manchester, Wolverhampton
Salary:
£41,679
Job grade:
Senior Executive Officer
Business area:
Analytical
Contract type:
Permanent
Working pattern:
Full-time, Part-time

About the job

Job summary

This vacancy is for candidates who wish to apply under the GSR profession as a current member or as an applicant that is eligible for membership, or as a current member of the GSS.

If you are not currently a member of the Government Statistical Service (GSS) but meet the entry criteria to join this profession, please apply to vacancy number 342134.

The Resettlement part of the Social Housing and Resettlement Directorate (SHARD) leads the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities’ work to support the welcome, resettlement and integration of people seeking safety in the UK through protected routes.

This includes:

• Leading within the Department on resettlement and responding to any future humanitarian or resettlement events

• Responsibility for the Homes for Ukraine Programme, which has seen a groundswell of support from the public to offer homes across the UK;

• Oversight of the Hong Kong British Nationals (Overseas) Welcome Programme which supports local authorities to work closely with VCS partners to help Hong Kong BN(O) arrivals to successfully settle in the UK.

• Close working with the Home Office and local councils to support the resettlement and integration of Afghan and British Nationals who have arrived in the UK as part of the Afghan Relocations and Assistance Policy (ARAP) and the Afghan Citizens Resettlement Scheme (ACRS) schemes.

• Overseeing coordination and connections across the range of DLUHCs interests including wider cohorts. Our work includes strong collaboration with a range of government departments, local partners and agencies and the voluntary sector to ensure we are helping Ukrainians, Afghans, Hong Kong BN(O)s and other newly arrived cohorts to secure appropriate accommodation and access the services they need to integrate into their new communities.

Job description

The Analysis and Data team is a friendly, cross profession team that works across policy teams in the Resettlement part of SHARD to ensure policy making is underpinned by high quality evidence and analysis. We are recruiting for a statistician or social researcher to work across the strategic analysis and data and reporting units of the Analysis and Data team.

We particularly welcome candidates from an ethnic minority background and other underrepresented groups to apply, as we work to continually improve our ability to represent the places and communities we support through our work.

The Analysis and Data team brings together strategic analysis, data and reporting for the various refugee and resettlement programmes in the directorate. We are recruiting for an SEO statistician or social researcher to work across the Strategic Analysis and Data and Reporting team.

You will have key responsibilities for the delivery and quality of data and analysis to inform policy development.

In this role, you will:

• Collate and analyse a range of large and complex data sets from across government, advising on the quality and availability of evidence and data to support policy development and operational needs.

• Develop robust evidence-based outputs to support decision-making, drawing on a range of analytical sources.

• Understand different methodological approaches to research and data collection (particularly survey data), with an appreciation of when to apply differing methodologies accordingly.

• Quality assurance of various complex datasets using R coding, including those business-critical to the delivery of several key resettlement schemes run by the Department.

• Timely and accurate publication of weekly and quarterly management information on gov.uk, maintaining excellent working relationships with devolved administrations around publication of their data.

• Liaise with Home Office, ONS and OGDs and identify synergies in evidence-building exercises, aligning to common frameworks and outcomes.

• Manage relationships with external research partners, organising ‘Show and Tell’ sessions for the directorate and managing qualitative insights.

Person specification

Essential criteria:

You will have:

- Experience of working at pace to deliver high-quality assessment and briefing of data to a range of officials including senior leaders and Ministers.

- Solid understanding of different methodological approaches to research and data collection, with an appreciation of when to apply differing methodologies accordingly. Some experience in survey design and analysis.

- Strong analytical skills, with the ability to deliver at pace where data and policy is continually evolving and manage deadlines/expectations.

- Good written and verbal communication skills to clearly articulate data and evidence tailoring to a range of audiences.

- Experience of working with stakeholders and maintaining effective working relationships with internal and external providers including OGDs, CO and No10.

- Knowledge of coding languages to enable rapid and reproducible analysis (preferably R or Python)

- Good understanding of the Statistical Code of Practice and/or the Government Social Research framework.

Desirable criteria: - Knowledge and application of Power BI.

Analysts in DLUHC must be affiliated to a Government analytical profession. 

Candidates who successfully pass the initial filter and eligibility questions will be asked to confirm which of the analytical professions they belong to or are applying to be part of.  This information will be used to progress successful applications to the appropriate professional checks element of the process.  

Existing civil servants who are currently a member of one of these professions will retain their professional membership in this role.  Applicants on promotion will be assessed for promotion within their profession as part of the selection process.  Please make any current affiliation clear in your application 

External candidates or civil servants without a current profession affiliation may be considered for accreditation to one of the professions as part of the recruitment process.  If you are not currently a member of a government analytical profession you will be put through the membership process for your chosen profession as part of this application.  You must pass the membership process for your application to be successful.  If you do not pass the relevant profession entry test your application will not be taken further.  See the Guide for Analytical Candidates document for more details of the membership process for the relevant profession.  

You will need to address the technical competences for your profession in the application and at interview. 

Please refer to the Guide for Analytical Candidates which provides: 

1 - The technical competences for each analytical profession 

2 - details of the entry requirements to each analytical profession 

3 – details of the entry process for each analytical profession 

 

Entry Qualifications  

The entry qualifications are listed below.  Please list FULL details of your degree in your application form. 

Government Statistical Service (GSS): 

a first or second class honours degree in a numerate subject (2:1 minimum for Assistant Statistician and 2:2 minimum for Statistical Officer) containing at least 25% taught statistical content (e.g. Statistics, Mathematics, Economics, Sciences, Business Studies, Psychology, Geography or similar) 

or 

a higher degree, e.g. a MSc or PhD, in a subject containing formal statistical training (e.g. Statistics, Mathematics, Economics, Sciences, Business Studies, Psychology, Geography or similar) 

or 

have worked in a statistical or data science field and are able to demonstrate Continuous Professional Development (via a log book) in statistics or data science at the same level as a foundation degree or Higher National Diploma (level five) 

or 

have achieved or are on track to achieve a level four apprenticeship including at least two years in a statistical or data analysis field in government and are able to demonstrate Continuous Professional Development in statistics or data analysis (via a log book signed off by a manager or mentor who are members of the statistical profession) 

 

Government Social Research (GSR): 

Hold an undergraduate degree, at a minimum of 2:1 or 2:2 with a postgraduate degree, in a social science subject.  A qualifying social science subject is one which contains substantial social research methods training (comprising around one third of modules taken in the course).  It should cover quantitative methods and at least three of the five topics listed below. 

Mandatory: Quantitative methods, including research design, data collection (i.e. questionnaire design, sampling, weighting), data analysis (e.g. statistical analysis) 

Three of: 

  • Systematic/literature reviews 
  • Qualitative methods, including research design, data collection (i.e. interviewing, focus groups, ethnography), data analysis (e.g. thematic analysis) 
  • Interpretation of data (qual & quan), presentation of results, provision of recommendations/ conclusions 
  • Study design, hypothesis formation, testing and evaluation 
  • Application of ethics to research 

Relevant degree subjects in the social sciences can be varied.  Potential members need to demonstrate the substantial social research methods training they have taken and not merely the social science degree subjects. 

OR 

Professional Experience route: Hold an undergraduate degree at a minimum of 2:1, or 2:2 with a postgraduate degree, in any subject, or a degree equivalent (e.g. an advanced Certificate or Diploma from MRS), plus have at least 4 years’ social research practice experience. The degree requirement for Main Stream applicants is an undergraduate degree at a minimum of 2:2 with no need for a postgraduate degree. In any case, social research practice experience consists of experience working in a research agency, market research agency or specialist research team. To enter the GSR through this route you must make explicit the breadth and depth of your research experience and skills, which must include quantitative research methods and three of the following: systematic/literature reviews; qualitative methods; interpretation of data and presentation of results; study design, hypothesis testing and application of ethics to research. 

Social Researcher candidates (entry test) : 

Candidates who ARE NOT members of Government Social Research service (GSR) will be invited to sit the Government Social Research Knowledge test.  This is the first part of the GSR membership process and you must pass this test for your application to progress to the next stage of the recruitment process. 

If you are not an existing GSR member, we will arrange for you to sit the GSR Knowledge Test as soon as possible.  This test must be completed prior to interview and if candidates fail the knowledge test their application is terminated at this point. 

Candidates who are EXISTING members of Government Social Research service (GSR) do not need to complete this test as part of their application. 

 

Competencies 

You will need to address the technical competences for your profession in the application and at interview. 

Professional technical competences are listed below:

Statistics competences 

Statistics: Acquiring data/Understanding customer needs 

Statistics: Data analysis 

Statistics: Presenting and disseminating data effectively 

Social research competences 

Social research: technical skills 

Social research: using and promoting social research 

Benefits

Alongside your salary of £41,679, Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities contributes £10,457 towards you being a member of the Civil Service Defined Benefit Pension scheme. Find out what benefits a Civil Service Pension provides.

Things you need to know

Selection process details

We are for everyone 

At DLUHC we value diversity and inclusion and actively encourage and welcome applications from everyone, including those that are underrepresented in our workforce. We promote equality of opportunity in all aspects of employment and a working environment free from discrimination, harassment, bullying and victimisation. 

We would strongly recommend that applicants get in touch with the vacancy manager to find out more information about this role. 

We are for everyone

DLUHC want to bring in and bring on a diverse workforce at all levels.  

Our application system is designed to remove as much bias as possible from the recruitment system – this means that a hiring manager does not know your name, your details, see your whole application in one go (or have your CV at review stage unless stated otherwise).  

At application stage you will be asked to upload a CV document. Unless stated otherwise in the advert, your CV will not form part of the assessment but will be used for information purposes and only shared with the panel at interview stage. 

Your answers are randomised and chunked up. This means that each assessor views sets of responses to questions for example all candidates’ responses to ‘Seeing the Big Picture’ rather than seeing a candidate’s full application. The science behind this is that recruitment can be subject to ordering and fatigue effects and we want to reduce this as much as possible.  

Most of our campaigns utilise multiple assessors and so it is possible that each of your answers would be viewed by different assessors. 

When writing your application, remember: 

  • that the assessor won’t be reading your answers sequentially.  
  • do not assume that the same assessors will have read all of your answers.  

If talking about something in your first answer, make sure that write the second answer as if you had not written the first (and so on!) 

At sift, we will be assessing: 

Technical (lead behaviour) - Please set out an example of designing and running an analytical project, which involves collection and analysis of both qualitative and quantitative data.

Behaviour 1 - Communicating and influencing

Behaviour 2 - Managing a quality service

Behaviour 3 - Delivering at pace

There is a 250 word limit per question. 

In the event that we receive a large number of applications, we may conduct an initial sift using the lead behaviour listed in the advert. Candidates who pass the initial sift may be progressed to a full sift, or progressed straight to assessment/interview. 

We do not consider direct CV applications – you must apply for this role via the application link on Civil Service Jobs. 

 

Please note that near miss offers may be made at the lower grade to candidates who do not meet the grade criteria for this campaign  

The interview will be of a blended nature consisting of:  

Behaviour - Communicating and Influencing, Managing A Quality Service, Delivering at Pace

Technical - Technical questions will be based on the analytical competences. 

Candidates invited to interview will be expected to complete an oral briefing exercise as part of the interview process.  The oral-briefing exercise is designed to simulate aspects of the job to be performed and provide a second basis for assessing the behaviours and competencies required in the job. 

The oral briefing is usually part of the professional requirements as government analytical professions require an oral briefing as part of the entry or promotion process.  The briefing will take one of the following forms: 

 A prepared on the day presentation to the interview panel which will be followed by questions from the panel.  You will be provided with all the information to use for your presentation on the day of your interview.  You will be given up to 45 minutes to read this information and prepare your presentation. 

OR 

 You will be provided with a question in advance of the interview and asked to prepare a presentation of a specific length addressing this question.  This presentation will be followed by questions from the panel. 

Candidates invited to interview will be given full instructions on the presentation being used. 

The presentation will be followed by a 45 minute competency based interview. 

 

In the full campaign we will test the below Success Profile Elements: 

Behaviours: Communicating and Influencing, Managing A Quality Service, Delivering at Pace

Technical: Technical questions will be based on the analytical competences. 

Senior Social Researcher/Senior Statistical Officer

  • The salary for this role will be £45,813(London) or £41,679(National). 
  • For existing civil servants, the usual policy on level transfer and promotion will apply and is non-negotiable. 
  • In order to receive this allowance, you must be fully qualified and in a qualifying post as agreed by the Finance Head of Profession. 

Please note that the average employer pension contribution is based upon the National minimum salary for this role. Should your agreed starting salary for this role be different, the average employer pension contribution will be calculated accordingly. If you are a Secondee, this will not apply as you will remain on your home organisation’s terms and conditions.   

 

BENEFITS

Transfers across the Civil Service on or after 4 October 2018: 

Any move to DLUHC from another employer will mean you can no longer access childcare vouchers. This includes moves between government departments. You may however be eligible for other government schemes, including Tax-Free Childcare. Determine your eligibility at https://www.childcarechoices.gov.uk 

For further information about the benefits available to DLUHC employees, please see the attached Candidate Pack. 

 

GEOGRAPHICAL LOCATION

  • Birmingham
  • Bristol
  • Leeds
  • Manchester
  • London 
  • Wolverhampton 
  • Darlington* 

There may be opportunities for candidates to work flexibly depending on the business needs. This will be discussed with the vacancy manager on a case-by-case basis if you are successful for the role. 

*Please note: The Darlington Economic Campus is a pioneering new cross-government hub which will bring together people across departments and public organisations to play an active role in the most important economic issues of the day. The work of the Campus will make a real difference to people both across the UK and internationally. There will be substantial career opportunities and exciting prospects - a career at the Campus means you will be working at the heart of Government, with access to the benefits and fantastic opportunities offered by the civil service.   

For further information on the DEC, please take a look at the attached DEC candidate pack. 

 

SIFT AND INTERVIEW DATES

Sifting is envisaged to take place from 25/03/24 with interview dates to be confirmed. All interviews are currently being held remotely via videocall. 

 

RESERVE LIST

In the event that we identify more appointable candidates than we currently have posts available, we will hold applicant details on a reserve list for a period of 6 months from which further appointments can be made. This may include roles at a lower grade. Candidates placed on a reserve list will be informed of this. Due to the length of time CTC checks can take, our HR Shared Services team will contact reserve list candidates for London based roles to commence CTC checks. Those candidates who do not wish to remain on the reserve list should contact recruitment@communities.gov.uk to be removed from the reserve list. 

CTC (Counter-terrorism Clearance)

Important note 

 
Successful candidates for roles based in our 2 Marsham Street building must meet the security requirements before they can be appointed. The level of security needed is counter-terrorist check and the process can take up to 8 weeks to complete. 
 
Please note that successful candidates will need to pass the CTC security checks – this requires you to have been resident in the UK for the past 3 years. Please refer to the DLUHC Notes on Security Clearance section of our Candidate Pack for further information on Counter Terrorism Clearance (CTC). Thank you. 
 
Candidates should also note that with effect from 1st August 2018 the department will also check all applicants who are successful at interview, against the Internal Fraud Database (IFD) held by the Cabinet Office. In accordance with the Civil Service Internal Fraud Policy, any applicant who is included on the IFD will be refused employment by DLUHC. Please see the Candidate Pack for further information on the Internal Fraud Database. 

Before starting your application it’s very important to make sure that you are eligible to apply and meet the Civil Service nationality requirements. All candidates are expected to read the information provided in the DLUHC candidate pack regarding nationality requirements and rules 

 

Candidate Pack Information 

Please see attached Candidate pack for further information. 

 

Internal Fraud Database 

The Internal Fraud function of the Fraud, Error, Debt and Grants Function at the Cabinet Office processes details of civil servants who have been dismissed for committing internal fraud, or who would have been dismissed had they not resigned.The Cabinet Office receives the details from participating government organisations of civil servants who have been dismissed, or who would have been dismissed had they not resigned, for internal fraud. In instances such as this, civil servants are then banned for 5 years from further employment in the civil service. The Cabinet Office then processes this data and discloses a limited dataset back to DLUHC as a participating government organisations. DLUHC then carry out the pre employment checks so as to detect instances where known fraudsters are attempting to reapply for roles in the civil service. In this way, the policy is ensured and the repetition of internal fraud is prevented.  

For more information please see - Internal Fraud Register 



Feedback will only be provided if you attend an interview or assessment.

Security

Successful candidates must undergo a criminal record check. Successful candidates must meet the security requirements before they can be appointed. The level of security needed is counter-terrorist check (opens in a new window).

See our vetting charter (opens in a new window). People working with government assets must complete baseline personnel security standard (opens in new window) checks.

Nationality requirements

This job is broadly open to the following groups:

  • UK nationals
  • nationals of the Republic of Ireland
  • nationals of Commonwealth countries who have the right to work in the UK
  • nationals of the EU, Switzerland, Norway, Iceland or Liechtenstein and family members of those nationalities with settled or pre-settled status under the European Union Settlement Scheme (EUSS) (opens in a new window)
  • nationals of the EU, Switzerland, Norway, Iceland or Liechtenstein and family members of those nationalities who have made a valid application for settled or pre-settled status under the European Union Settlement Scheme (EUSS)
  • individuals with limited leave to remain or indefinite leave to remain who were eligible to apply for EUSS on or before 31 December 2020
  • Turkish nationals, and certain family members of Turkish nationals, who have accrued the right to work in the Civil Service
Further information on nationality requirements (opens in a new window)

Working for the Civil Service

The Civil Service Code (opens in a new window) sets out the standards of behaviour expected of civil servants.

We recruit by merit on the basis of fair and open competition, as outlined in the Civil Service Commission's recruitment principles (opens in a new window). The Civil Service embraces diversity and promotes equal opportunities. As such, we run a Disability Confident Scheme (DCS) for candidates with disabilities who meet the minimum selection criteria. The Civil Service also offers a Redeployment Interview Scheme to civil servants who are at risk of redundancy, and who meet the minimum requirements for the advertised vacancy.

Added: 6 months ago