Title: SURVEY RESEARCH
1SURVEY RESEARCH
- KRISTOPHER, KIM, SHELLEY AND JILLIAN
2Getting Started
- A telephone survey says that 51 percent of
college students drink until they pass out at
least once a month. The other 49 percent didn't
answer the phone. -Craig Kilborn
3The Following Topics will be Discussed
- Theoretical Tradition and Epistemological
Paradigm - Most Appropriate Types of Research Questions
- Major Features of the Method
- Major Criteria for Rigour
- Strengths and Weaknesses
- Designing a Project using the Method
4Theoretical and Epistemological Background
- In general, a survey involves the collection of
information from a large group of people or a
population, commonly via - Opinion Surveys
- Political Polls
- TV Viewing Polls
- However
5Theoretical and Epistemological Background
- our focus is on survey research, which is
conducted to advance scientific knowledge or
develop theory. - Survey research is frequently utilized within the
Social Sciences, including disciplines like
Psychology, Marketing, and Organizational
Behaviour.
6Positivism
- Positivism has become a dominant institutional
form in social research. - However, during the 1970's and 1980's prominent
concerns were raised about the limits of
quantitative data and methods often associated
with positivism including survey research
designs. - Eg Concerns explained.
7Positively More Positivism
- Assumption Objective world which science can
mirror with privileged knowledge. - Key Focus Search for contextual and
organizational variables which cause
organizational actions. - Key Theories in Paradigm Contingency theory,
systems theory, population ecology, transaction
cost economics of organizing, dustbowl
empiricism, etc. - Goal of Paradigm Uncover truth and facts as
quantitatively specified relations among
variables.
8Positively More Positivism II
- Criteria for Assessing Research
- PredictionExplanation, Rigour internal/external
validity, reliability. - Unit of Analysis The variable.
- Research Methods and Types of Analysis
- Experiments, questionnaires, secondary data
analysis, quantitatively coded documents. - Quantitative Regression, Likert scaling,
structural equation modelling. - Qualitative Grounded theory testing.
9Major Features of the Method
- Variables are often operationalized when
researchers ask people questions as a way of
getting data for analysis and interpretation (the
questions are either asked by an interviewer, or
written down and given to respondents for
completion) - 2 Forms of surveys
- Questionnaire document containing questions and
others types of items designed to solicit
information appropriate for analysis - In dept Interviewing ask people questions in
order to gather data - Survey research is especially appropriate for
making descriptive studies of large populations - Data collected may be used for explanatory
purposes
10The Beauty of Questionnaires
- It provides a method of collecting Data by either
asking people questions or asking them to agree
or disagree with statements representing
different points of view - Used primarily in survey research, but also in
experiments, field research and other modes of
observations - Questions can be open ended (respondents supply
their own answer-similar to a short answer
question on an exam), answers can be in the form
of writing on paper or verbally reporting answers
to an interviewer - Example what is your opinion on abortion?
- It can also be closed ended (select from a list
of answers provided)? This type of questionnaire
is more common than open-ended ones because they
provide greater uniformity of responses, and are
more easily processed - Example From a range of 1-5, how would you rate
this hotel? With 1 being poor, and 5 as excellent
11A Closer Look at Closed Ended Questions
- Two structural requirements for closed ended
questions - 1. Response categories provided should be
exhaustive (should include all possible responses
that might be expected-even if answers may be
obscure to you and me). Usually researchers try
to ensure this by adding a category such as
other and may follow please specify - 2. The answer category must be mutually
exclusive respondent should not be compelled to
select more than one? to ensure this, we must
carefully consider each combination of
categories, could the respondent reasonably
choose more than one answer? - If our survey is constructed carefully, we
usually do not need to add an instruction to tell
respondents to select the best answer.
12Things to Note for whenAsking Questions
- Make Items Clear questionnaire items should be
precise so that the respondent knows exactly what
the researcher is asking - Avoid Double-Barrelled Questions Researchers
asking respondents for a single answer to
question that actually has multiple parts - Respondents must be competent to answer When
asking respondents to provide information, must
keep in mind whether they can do so reliably - Respondents must be willing to answer Often, we
would like to learn things from people that they
are unwilling to share with us
13Continued
- Questions should be relevant Questionnaire
should be relevant to most respondents - Shorts Items are the best respondents are often
unwilling to study an item in order to understand
it, respondent should be able to read something
quickly, understand the main point, and select an
answer without difficulty, answers should not be
misinterpreted - Avoid Negative Items/Negative words appearance
of a negation in a questionnaire items paves the
way for easy misinterpretation - Avoid Biased Items and Terms Meaning of
someones response to a question depends in large
part on its wording, some questions seem to
encourage particular response more than do other
questions
14Three Main Methods for Administering Survey
Questionnaires
- Self administered questionnaires respondents are
asked to complete the questionnaire themselves
(example Mail survey), administer questionnaire
to a group of respondents gathered at the same
place at the same time. - Surveys administered by interviewers in
face-to-face encounters - Surveys conducted by the telephone
15Mail Distribution and Return
- Research worker can either hand deliver
questionnaires, requesting that respondents mail
the completed questionnaires to the research
office or after questionnaires are mailed,
researcher visits homes to pick them up and check
for completeness - Completion rate seems to be higher when research
worker delivers the questionnaire, picks it up or
both. - Basic method of collecting data through mail is
to send questionnaire, with a letter of
explanation and a self addressed, stamped
envelope for retuning (for example, like the
surveys we receive in our mailboxes, many often
have the postage paid indicated in the corner
of the envelope) - The Main reason for not returning questionnaires
is that its TOO MUCH TROUBLE!
16Acceptable Response Rates
- Response rates the number of people
participating in a survey divided by the number
selected in the sample (percentage form) - Inferential statistics used with survey analysis
assumes that all members of the initial sample
complete and return their questionnaires - Because that is very rare to happen, response
bias is a concern?researchers often hopes for the
possibility that the respondents look essentially
like a random sample of the initial sample, and a
somewhat smaller random sample of the total
population
17Continued
- Overall response rate is one guide to the
representativeness of the sample reponsdents?high
response rates means less chance of significant
response bias, with low response rates ,
correspondents are likely to differ from the
respondents in ways other than their willingness
to participate in the survey - Rough guides (with no statistical basis) to what
is a good response rate 50 is adequate for
analysis and reporting, 60 is good and 70 is
very good
18Interview Surveys
- Interviewers ask questions orally and record
respondents answers - Usually done in a face-to-face encounter, but
telephone interviewing follow similar guidelines - Most interviews require more than one
interviewers, but small scale interviews can be
done by one person - Researchers must assume that a questionnaire item
will mean the same thing to every respondent and
every given response must mean the same when
given by different respondents - The interviews presence should not affect a
respondent's perception of a question or the
answer given - To save time and money, a given interviewer is
typically assigned to complete all the interviews
in a particular geographical area
19General Guidelines for Survey Interviewing
- Appearance and Demeanor interviewers should
dress in a fashion similar to that of the people
theyll be interviewing (cleanliness and neatness
in modest apparel). Dress and grooming are
typically regarded as signs of a persons
attitudes and orientations. Interviewers should
be pleasant, must communicate interest in getting
to know the respondent without appearing to spy
(never too casual or clingy). Interview will be
more successful if the interviewer can become the
kind of person the respondent is comfortable
with, respondents deserve the most enjoyable
experience the researcher can provide
20Continued
- Familiarity with Questionnaire must be able to
read questionnaire items to respondents without
error and stumbling over words, lines must be
read as though they are part of a natural
conversation - Interviewer must be familiar with the
specifications prepared in conjunction with the
questionnaire - Some questions will not fit a given respondent's
situation, interviewer must determine how the
question should be interpreted in that situation - It would be better for the interviewer to leave a
question unanswered than to spend a period of
time searching though the specifications for
clarifications or trying to interpret the
relevant instructions - Following Question Wording Exactly
- Recording Responses Exactly
- Probing for Responses Sometimes respondents
will give an inappropriate/incomplete answer,
request for an elaboration can be useful (Probe).
Probes must be completely neutral, must not
affect the nature of subsequent response
21Advantages of Doing an Interview Survey
- They typically attain high response rates (a
properly designed and executed interview survey
ought to achieve a completion rate of at least
80-85) - Presence of and interviewer decreases the number
of dont knows and no answers, since
clarification can easily be done on the spot - Interviewers can clarify matters if respondent
clearly misunderstands the intent of the question - Can observe respondents as well as ask questions
22Telephone SurveysPositive Factors ()
- Saves both money and time
- May dress anyway you please without affecting the
answers respondents give - Respondents may be more honest in giving socially
disapproved answers (no eye to eye contact) - Interviewers can communicate a lot about
themselves over the phone, even though they cant
be seen - Allow greater control over data collection if
several interviewers are engaged in the project
23Telephone SurveysNegative Factors (-)
- Some phone numbers are unlisted (but this has
been erased through a technique called random
digit dialling) - Bogus surveys-ones that are actually sales
campaigns disguised as research - The ease in which people can hang up
- Answering machines (using machines to screen
calls)?however research has showed that this had
not yet had a significant effect on the ability
of telephone researchers to contact prospective
respondents
24Comparing theThree Different Methods
25Computer Assisted Telephone Interviewing (CATI)
- Increasingly used by academic, government and
commercial survey researchers - Central computer is programmed to select a
telephone number at random and dials it - Interviewer introduces study and asks the
question displayed on the screen and then types
that answer into the computer terminal (depending
on the question-open/close ended) - Computer automatically prepares the data for
analysis, or researcher can begin analysing data
before the interview is complete (gaining and
advanced view of how the analysis will turn out)
26New Technologies andSurvey Research
- CAPI (Computer assisted personal interviewing)
face to face interviews rather than over the
phone - CASI (Computer assisted self interviewing)
respondent reads questions on the computer screen
and enters his/her own answers - CSAQ (Computerized self administered
questionnaire) respondent receives the
questionnaire on a floppy disk, bulletin board,
or other means and completes the questions,
software then accepts the answers. Respondent
then returns the data file - TDE (Touchtone data entry) initiates process by
calling a number at the research organization,
prompts a series of computerized questions,
respondent answers by pressing the keys on the
telephone pad - VR (Voice recognition) same as TDE, but the
system accepts spoken responses - Internet and world wide web
27Dos and Donts for Conducting Online Surveys
- DO
- Consistent wording between the invitation and the
survey - Use plain simple language
- Offer to share selected results from others who
also have completed the survey - Plan the time of day and day of week to mail
(when will respondents most likely be reading
mail at home?) - Be aware of technical limitations (Will
respondents have programs needed to access) - Test incentives, rewards and prize drawings to
determine the optimal response - Limit studies to gt15 minutes
- DO NOT
- Use terms such as unique ID number in the
invitation, then ask respondents to type
password when they get to the survey - Force the respondent to scroll down the screen
for the URL for the study location
28Secondary Analysis
- Survey research involves 3 steps questionnaire
construction, sample selection, and data
collection (interviewing/self administered
questionnaires) - This is a form of research in which the data is
collected and processed by one researcher are
reanalyzed- often for a different purpose, by
another - Example General Social Survey (GSS)
- Advantage cheaper and faster than doing original
surveys, benefit from the work of top flight
professionals, enhance possibility of meta
analysis (researcher brings together a body of
past research on a topic) - Disadvantage question of validity (have no
assurance that data collected will be appropriate
for you research interests)
29Rigour in Survey Research
- Internal Validity
- To be internally valid, the conclusions of the
research must be supported by the data. - Internal validity is judged according to the
accuracy with which a description of particular
events represents the data. - The essence of internal validity for survey
research is complete confidence that your
conclusions come from the data.
30Reliability
- Reliability
- Reliability is generally concerned with
replication an account is considered to be
reliable if the data are reproducible. - If the analytic strategy were repeated by the
same or different investigator, then the results
should be the same.
31Another Type of Validity
- External Validity
- External validity or generalizability for survey
research is captured by the question, How can
one determine the extent to which the findings of
a particular inquiry have applicability in other
contexts or with other subjects? - Essentially, the extent to which the effect can
be generalized to populations, settings,
treatment variables, and measurement variables.
32External Validity Continued
- This can also refer to fit or the degree to
which the audience or reader of the report is
able to transfer the research findings to
contexts outside of the study situation to other
settings. - The researcher must supply a substantial amount
of clear and detailed information or thick
description about the issue/phenomenon studied
and the setting in which that issue/phenomenon
was found. - The degree of transferability is a direct
function of the similarity or fittingness
between the two contexts.
33Strategies for Ensuring Rigour
- Verification Strategies
- The most important way to ensure that research is
rigourous is to focus on verification during the
study. - Verification is the process of checking,
confirming, making sure, being certain. - Doing this as the study is conducted is key as
the researcher then can identify and correct
threats to reliability and validity as they
surface.
34Initial Strategies Address
- Investigator Responsiveness
- Methodological Coherence
- Sampling
- Data Analysis
- Thinking Theoretically
35Additional Strategies
- There are other strategies that can be used
during the research to contribute to rigour,
namely - Prolonged Engagement
- Participant Checks
- Journal Writing
- Peer Review
- Audit Trail.
36Weaknesses for Survey Research
- Lacks the context of social life
- Appear superficial on coverage of complex topics
- Subject to artificiality
- Surveys can also be inflexible because the
initial study design must remain the same - Therefore, surveys are weak on validity
37Strengths for Survey Research
- Describes the characteristics of a large
population - Allows a large sample of respondents
- Surveys are flexible, allows flexibility in your
analyses - Surveys have a strength in measurement
- Helps determine unemployment rates, and voting
intensions - Helps examine official documents such as
marriage, birth, or death records - Therefore, surveys are strong on reliability
38Survey Design
- 1. Purpose
- 2. Respondent Group
- 3. Questionnaire Construction
- 4. Administration of Questionnaire
- 5. Analysis
- Example Sample Questionnaire (Handout)
- Student Opinion Survey on Group Assignments in
University Courses
39Format Guidelines
- Introduction
- Spacing
- Explanations
- Order of items
- Pre-testing
40Additional Resources
- Presentation Website
- http//members.shaw.ca/kristopher.skinner/soc315
- Group Project E-mail
- soc315project_at_hotmail.com