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Developing a Questionnaire - Research Survey - Lecture Slides, Slides of Research Methodology

The purpose of this course is to familiarize participants with basic features of the design and implementation of surveys and acquaint them with principles and underlying theory from disciplines that traditionally use surveys. This lecture includes: Developing a Questionnaire, Survey Research, Survey Methods, Issues to Consider, Length, Type of Questionnaire, Self-Administered Surveys, Telephone Surveys, Self-Administered, Qualitative Methods

Typology: Slides

2012/2013

Uploaded on 08/31/2013

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Developing a Questionnaire

Using Questionnaires in Survey Research

  • Construction is key to valid and reliable

research

  • Well written and manageable questions
    • Manageable interviews
  • Consider why use survey methods?

Procedure for Development

  • Specify what information will be sought
  • Determine the type of questionnaire and method of administration
  • Determine the content of individual questions
  • Determine the form of response to each question
  • Determine the wording of each question

Forms

  • Self-administered surveys
  • Face-to-face interviews
  • Telephone surveys
  • Computer assisted and Web-based
  • E-mail

Self-Administered

  • Response rates tend to be lowest for mailed questionnaires
    • As low as 20 – 30%
    • Low response rate affects generalizability
  • More standardization of the questions
  • An increased reliability over other qualitative methods
    • Response patterns can vary

Self-Administered

  • Closed-ended items limit the researcher
    • Adjust for differences in respondents
    • Clarify misunderstood items
    • Explain ambiguity
  • Not suitable for all audiences
    • Young children
    • Visually impaired
    • Learning/reading disabilities

Web-Based Surveys

  • Create own web page or hire a commercial company
    • www.hostedsurvey.com
  • Allow for instant data coding
  • Need to be able to write code or use software
  • Maybe less time and costs
  • Access is a huge issue (affecting generalizability)
    • Variation in computer ownership and usage
    • Internet access

Interviews

  • Reading questionnaire items in a face-to-face

or telephone situation

  • Unstructured or in-depth
    • Suited for exploratory research
    • Either with one person or in focus groups
    • Open-ended items
    • Cannot standardize
    • Good for complex situations

Interviews

  • Response rates tend to be highest with face-

to-face interviews

  • Excluding ‘street corner’ technique
  • Issues
  • More time
  • Smaller samples
  • Higher cost

Telephone

  • Most popular
    • Less costly
    • Less time
    • Less subjective to interviewer
      • As compared to face-to-face
  • Often conducted with computers
  • Can probe for information/clarification
  • Threshold about 20 minutes

Conceptualizing the Task

  • List the set of research questions, hypotheses
    • Consider how others have measured
    • At least one questionnaire item for each variable
    • Operationalize the concept
  • Outline what you want to cover
    • Consider the following categories
      • Attitudes: feelings and opinions
      • Behaviors: what they actually do
      • Demographics: who they are

Measuring Behavior

  • Translate opinions into action
  • Useful in
    • Making policy
    • Improving working conditions
    • Evaluation of programs
  • Measure of what they say they do

Instructions

  • Beginning of each section, should include clear instructions
  • Disclose needed information for respondents to decide whether to complete the survey
  • Consider phrasing – Don’t alienate
  • Tell whether
    • Anonymous : no names or IDs
    • Confidential : names or IDs, not attached responses

Instructions

  • Information about due date
    • General time line is a good idea
  • Information on submitting
  • Be consistent with instructions and format
    • A little variation might break up ‘routine’