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Questionnaires

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Title: Questionnaires


1
Questionnaires
  • A.N. Oppenheim, Questionnaire Design

2
Questionnaires
  • FOCUS
  • What is the focus of your questionnaire?

3
Questionnaires
  • The focus of your questionnaire is your research
    question
  • All questions in your questionnaire need to be
    relevant to your research question.

4
Questionnaires
  • To help further with the focus identify intended
    audience for your questionnaire is it a
    particular organisation, a particular group of
    people, or everyone?

5
Questionnaires
  • ELEMENTS
  • What are the parts of a questionnaire?

6
Questionnaires
  • PREAMBLE
  • Explain what the survey is for This survey sets
    out to ...
  • Reassure the participants Please note if you
    fill in this questionnaire, your answers will be
    treated in highly confidential way. Neither I,
    the Dublin Institute of Technology nor any other
    third part will identify your name, email address
    or any other personal details, nor will it be
    possible to identify you in any way in the report
    I will publish as part of my MSc dissertation. I
    would like to personally thank you for your time
    in taking part in this survey.

7
Questionnaires
  • TYPES OF QUESTIONS
  • Open-ended
  • Close-ended
  • Combination of both

8
Questionnaires
  • Open-ended Close-ended

9
Questionnaires
  • Open-ended
  • Slower to administer
  • Harder to record responses
  • Does not stifle response
  • Answerer can raise new issues
  • Answerer feels they can speak their mind
  • What does a blank answer mean ?

10
Questionnaires
  • Close-ended
  • Faster to administer
  • Easier to record responses
  • Answerer can only give predefined answers
  • Answerer cannot raise new issues
  • Answerer feels constrained
  • More likely to answer all questions (box tick)

11
Questionnaires
  • LIKERT SCALES
  • A special type of close-ended question is where
    you get the respondent to classify their
    responses on a scale of 1 to 5 (or in any five
    ordinal categories).

12
Questionnaires
  • LIKERT SCALES
  • Poor, Weak, O.K., Good, Excellent
  • Very Low, Low, O.K., High, Very High
  • 1, 2, 3, 4, 5

13
Questionnaires
  • LIKERT SCALES
  • To make life easier for yourself, you dont need
    to label each of the five values if you dont
    need to.

Very Bad
Very Good 1 2 3
4 5
14
Thank them
  • CLOSING REMARKS
  • "Thank you for taking the time to participate in
    this survey"

15
Questionnaires
  • DESIGN
  • How will I design the questions?

16
Questionnaires
  • Think clearly about questions (need to constrain
    answers as much as possible)
  • Make sure results will answer your research
    question
  • You can use the Internet for conducting surveys
    if you need to cover wide geographic reach

17
Questionnaires
  • Check your grammar, twice
  • Its a proofreaders' Rule of Thumb that if you
    read something twice, it gets rid of 95 of
    errors.

18
Questionnaires
  • Keep questions short and simple
  • Avoid questions with not
  • Avoid questions with bias
  • Avoid sensitive questions (ask indirectly)
  • Do not ask compound questions, just ask one
    question at a time
  • e.g. "Do you know what services are available to
    you and how to find out?"

19
Questionnaires
  • DESIGN
  • How will I design the questions?

20
Questionnaires
  • Before you deploy to participants, deploy a few
    pilot versions of the questionnaire to friends,
    family and fellow students.
  • Correct any complicated, misstated, or ambiguous
    questions

21
Questionnaires
  • Deployment Approaches
  • Self-administered
  • Interviewer administered

22
Questionnaires
  • Self-administered
  • Means you give the questionnaire to the
    participants and they fill it out in their own
    time, at their own pace.
  • This approach can allow you to reach large
    audiences, e.g. by deploying over the Internet.
  • The problem is that if they dont understand a
    question, they will probably guess what it means,
    and that answer with be invalid.

23
Questionnaires
  • Interviewer administered
  • Means you are present when participant or
    participants are filling out the questionnaire.
  • If you are dealing with an individual or group
    you can instruct them how to fill out the
    questionnaire I want everyone to start with
    question 1, spend about 30 seconds on that ...
    O.K. now move onto the next question, etc.
  • If they dont understand a question, they can ask
    you, and you can tell the individual or group.

24
Incentives
  • Survey research suggests that there is a chance
    that offering an incentive may add bias to a
    survey
  • e.g. Singer, E., Bossarte, R., 2006, Incentives
    for Survey Participation When Are They
    Coercive?, American Journal of Preventive
    Medicine, Volume 31, Issue 5, Pages 411-418

25
Incentives
  • More refs
  • http//www.ijis.net/ijis1_1/ijis1_1_goeritz.pdf
  • http//www.nyu.edu/gsas/dept/politics/faculty/mort
    on/Incentives_24June06.pdf
  • http//www.iser.sx.ac.uk/publications/working-pape
    rs/iser/2007-01.pdf
  • http//www.isr.umich.edu/src/smp/Electronic20Copi
    es/51-Draft106.pdf
  • http//www.nber.org/chapters/c10111.pdf

26
Questionnaires
  • EXAMPLES
  • Can I see a few examples of questions?

27
Questionnaires
  • The following is an example of a questionnaire
    that was developed by a student who was comparing
    text-based information with a visual
    representation of the same information gtgtgt

28
Questionnaires
29
Questionnaires
  • What do you think of the questions on the
    following slide gtgtgt

30
Questionnaires
31
Questionnaires
Unclear Question and Over-Specified Answers
Compound Question and Over-Specified Answers
Asymmetric Answers
32
Other Useful Approaches
33
Focus groups
  • Take time to arrange, so prepare in advance (use
    an intermediary to help you if you can)
  • Who will be in your focus group? (e.g. age,
    gender)
  • Size of focus group (8-10 is typical)
  • Consider whether or not to have separate focus
    groups for different ages or genders (e.g.
    discussing sex and sexuality)

34
Site visits and observation
  • Site visits involve visiting an organization,
    community project etc
  • Consider using a guide
  • Observation is when you visit a location and
    observe what is going on, drawing your own
    conclusions
  • Both facilitate making your research more
    relevant and concrete

35
Case studies
  • Method of capturing and presenting concrete
    details of real or fictional situations in a
    structured way
  • Good for comparative analysis

36
Participatory research
  • Allows participation of community being
    researched in research process (e.g. developing
    research question choosing methodology
    analysing results)
  • Good way to ensure research does not simply
    reinforce prejudices and presumptions of
    researcher
  • Good for raising awareness in community and
    developing appropriate action plans
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