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Key outputs from the GSS Quality Task Force and how these can help you…. Jill Pobjoy (ONS), Emma Newman (ONS) and Nick Woodhill (DASA). Background to Quality Task Force. A Task Force under GSS SPSC Established in January 2010 to develop policies, standards and good practice on
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Key outputs from the GSS Quality Task Force and how these can help you… Jill Pobjoy (ONS), Emma Newman (ONS) and Nick Woodhill (DASA)
Background to Quality Task Force • A Task Force under GSS SPSC • Established in January 2010 to develop policies, standards and good practice on • - Quality management • - Quality assurance • - Quality reviews • - Quality measurement and reporting
Achievements • A good practice document and definitions to aid quality management • Quality training to understand and implement quality assurance • A tool (“QMHT”) for quality reviews • Good practice guidance on quality measurement and reporting • These are now described in more detail
GSS Quality Good Practice Document • To help producers of official statistics achieve the quality requirements of the Code of Practice • Concentrates in particular on Principle 4 ‘Sound methods and assured quality’ • Supplements the National Statistician’s Guidance on Quality Methods and Harmonisation
Key Definitions The task force decided on the key quality definitions which have been approved by GSS SPSC • Quality – ‘fitness for purpose’ • Quality Management - ‘an encompassing approach to quality work’ • Quality Assurance – ‘anticipating and avoiding problems’ • Quality Control – ‘responding to observed problems’
GSS Quality Training A training course has been developed that specifically addresses the requirements in Principle 4, Practice 4 of the Code of Practice for Official Statistics • Available at two levels - a high level overview for G7 and above - operational level for SEOs and below
Aims of the Quality Training Both training courses aim to provide: • An understanding of Quality Assurance and Quality Management in the context of Official Statistics • Various examples to enable best practice and useful techniques to be shared • An understanding of how this links with Principle 4 of the Code of Practice
Course content Both courses focus on: • Key definitions • Output & Process quality • Quality Assurance & Quality Control: the differences, including exercises and examples • Quality Management: background and examples • How it all fits together • Useful tools
Quality Measurement & Reporting: Implementation in DASA Nick Woodhill (DASA)
DASA’s Background Quality Reports • DASA used the GSS QIF to produce BQRs which provide: • an overview of the output quality • users with information to determine if fit for purpose • information against the 6 ESS dimensions of quality • DASA’s Pilot Process: • internal report produced by methodologists who spent time with the relevant business area • This was resource intensive in current financial climate time • DASA being assessed by UKSA in Autumn 2011
DASA’s Background Quality Reports • DASA’s Plan: • Assess families of outputs • Remove burden from producers • Take a flexible approach • DASA’s flexible approach: • The BQR focused approach • Multiple BQRs and 1 WEfA • The WEfA focused approach • Multiple WEfAs with BQRs to follow • The combined approach • Multiple WEfAs and Multiple BQRs
DASA’s Background Quality Reports • Outcomes and Benefits • BQRs produced for 15 families of output • Better understanding of quality & how to report it • New initiatives have improved products: • Better commentary for the Civilian sickness absence statistics • Engagement in customer consultation (defence inflation) • New outputs to better meet customer requirements (deployment statistics & stationed location statistics) • Helped prepare DASA for UKSA assessment • Users of DASA publications can now judge quality
Quality, Methods and Harmonisation Tool (QMHT) Emma Newman (ONS)
QMHT for quality reviews • Self-assessment questionnaire, covering all stages of the statistical process • Principle 4 Practice 5: continuous improvement, regular reviews • Suitable for survey and administrative data • Identifies areas for improvement and good practice • A way of documenting the methods used • Users will only complete sections relevant to their work • Useful as part of preparation for UK Statistics Authority assessments
Who is QMHT for? • Survey managers • Staff involved in various stages of statistical process e.g. sample design, data collection, analysis etc. • Anyone producing a statistical output from survey or administrative data • Offers a port of call before consultation with methodologists
Testing and preparation • Cognitively tested across GSS • Piloted with different business areas in ONS • Endorsed by the National Statistician and ratified by GSS Heads of Profession • QMHT Version 2.0 is now finalised and available to download from StatNet and the ONS website • Visit the Quality Centre stand today for more information
How QMHT can benefit you • Helps producers of statistics to apply quality management and quality assurance • Promotes a culture of continuous improvement • Provides an effective way of meeting Principle 4 Practice 5, which is a requirement of the CoP • Has been developed purely to benefit producers of statistics – helps with assessment but not a requirement as such
Thank you…any questions? jill.pobjoy@ons.gsi.gov.uk nick.woodhill@dasa.defence.gsi.gov.uk emma.newman@ons.gsi.gov.uk