Title: Using secondary data
1Using secondary data
- JN602
- Week 06
- Sources and Reading
- Veal Chapter 5
- SLT Chapter 7
2Lecture outline
- Primary versus secondary data
- Types of secondary data
- Sources of secondary data
- Evaluation of data quality
- Reliability Validity
3Primary vs Secondary data (Veal, 2005)
- Primary data
- new data specifically collected in current
research project - researcher is the primary user.
- Secondary data
- data already exist - collected for some other
(primary) purpose - researcher is the secondary user.
- Secondary data analysis Chapter 12
4Uses/roles of secondary data
- Background/preparation
- Complementary comparison/validation of primary
data collected - Whole basis of project re-analysis of data
- Context setting (in report)
5Use of Secondary Analysis
- Economics
- Accounting
- Political Science
- Geography
- History
6Advantages of Secondary Data(SLT, 2003, Section
7.4)
- Fewer resource requirements
- Unobtrusive
- Often longitudinal
- Means of comparison with primary data
- Can provide contextual data
- Can result in unforeseen discoveries
- Permanence of data often stored in archives
7Disadvantages
- Collected for an alternate purpose
- May not match your own
- Difficulty of access
- Expense
- Degree of aggregation
- Data quality
8Types of Secondary Data
- Data already collected for some other purpose
SLT Figure 7.1
9Documentary
- Written
- Organisation documents personnel records, safety
audits - Reports company, government bodies, committees
- Public documents books, journals, newspapers
- Non-written
- Television and radio
- Video and audio tapes
10Company/Organisation data INTERNAL
- Financial accounts
- Sales data
- Prices
- Product development
- Advertising expenditure
- Purchase of supplies
- Human resources records
- Customer complaint logs
11Company/Organisation data EXTERNAL
- Company information is available from a variety
of sources, eg. - Biz_at_advantage
- www.whowhere.com
- www.hoovers.com 12,000 companies, USA others
- Australian Stock Exchange (www.asx.com.au)
- AGSM Annual reports
- Kompass, Dun Bradstreet (www.dnb.com), Fortune
500
12Possible documentary data?
- Journals and books
- Case study materials
- Committee minutes
- AIRC documentation
- Hansard transcripts
- Mailing list discussions
- Web-site content
- Advertising banners
13Multiple Source(SLT, 2003)
- Geographically-based
- FT and IMF country reports
- ABS Basic Community Profiles
- Time-series based
- Industry statistics and reports
- Employer associations (ACCI, VECCI, AIG)
- Government publications
- Australian Bureau of Statistics
- Bureau of Labor Statistics (U.S.A.)
14ABS Subject/Area codes
- Subject Geographical areas
- 1 General 0 Australia
- 2 Census of population and housing 1 New South
Wales - 3 Demography 2 Victoria
- 4 Social statistics 3 Queensland
- 5 National accounts, international trade
finance 4 South Australia - 6 Labour statistics and prices 5 Western
Australia - 7 Agriculture 6 Tasmania
- 8 Secondary industry and distribution 7
Northern Territory - 9 Transport, tourism 8 Aust. Capital
Territory - 9 External Territories
- Examples of publications and code numbers
- 6356.0 Employer Training Practices, Australia
- 8141.0 Small Medium Enterprises Business Growth
Performance Survey Australia - 6201.1 Labour Force, NSW
15Censuses
- Australia
- 2001 Census data
- http//www.abs.gov.au
- International
- New Zealand http//www.stats.govt.nz/
- U.S.A. http//www.stats-usa.gov
- IPUMSI http//www.hist.umn.edu/rmccaa/IPUMSI/
16On-going and recurring surveys
- Australian Bureau of Statistics
- http//www.abs.gov.au
- Reserve Bank of Australia
- http//www.rba.gov.au/Statistics/
- Statistics New Zealand
- http//www.stats.govt.nz/
- The World Bank
- http//www.worldbank.org/data/
17Ad-hoc surveys
- Social Science Data Archive (ANU)
- http//ssda.anu.edu.au
- The Data Archive (Uni. of Essex, UK)
- http//www.data-archive.ac.uk/
- Interuniversity Consortium for Political and
Social Research - http//www.icpsr.umich.edu
- Qualitdata
- http//qualidata.essex.ac.uk/
18Secondary Data Sets
- Longitudinal Survey of Australian Youth
- Australian Centre for Educational Research
- 1989 Present
- Progress from 15 through to post university
- Business Longitudinal Survey
- 5100 Australian small-to-medium enterprises
- 5 year (1994-98 panel study conducted by ABS
- World Values Survey
- 60 countries, every 5 years (approx.)
- Attitudes towards various social, economic and
political issues
19Considerations with Secondary Data
- Suitability
- Intended for another purpose
- Content versus external validity
- Reliability
- Measurement bias
- Original research methodology
- Cost
- Time
20Example Research Problem
- What distinguishes individuals who join trade
unions from those who do not? - What distinguishes individuals who leave trade
unions from those who do not? - Four possibilities
1996 In 1996 Out
1990 In Stayer Leaver
1990 - Out Joiner Never member
21Core research issues
- Union instrumentality and ideology
- Work context
- Life context
- Economic situation
- Family history
- Related attitudes
22Choice of Data
- Australian Workplace Industrial Relations Survey
- 19000 employees in 2000 workplaces
- National Social Science Survey
- 1200 respondents in both 1990 and 1996
- Makes it possible to assess change over time
- Account for differences in Work, Family, Income,
Location, Attitudes
23Advantages of secondary data
- Time
- Economy
- Generally inexpensive in comparison to collecting
one's own data - High initial cost AWIRS 1995 budget of 3 mil.
- Savings from re-use and re-cycling
- Often free for academic researchers or can be
acquired for tens or hundreds of dollars - E.g. post-graduate students are typically
precluded from collecting national samples
because of cost.
24Methodological Advantages
- Large-scale, representative samples
- Longitudinal, broad geographical
- Strong on external validity (the degree of
confidence with which findings about a sample can
be generalised to a population) - Often generated by well resourced teams that have
access to specialists - For example, high level sample design expertise
- Does not normally require approval from ethics
committees
25Goodness of Measures
- Reliability
- A matter of whether a particular technique,
applied repeatedly to the same object, yields the
same result each time. - How stable and consistent is the measuring
instrument? - Validity
- The extent to which an empirical measure
adequately reflects the real meaning of the
concept under consideration. - Are we measuring the right thing?
26Reliability
- Stability
- refers to the ability of a measure to maintain
consistency over time, despite uncontrollable
testing conditions or the state of the
respondents themselves - Internal consistency
- indicates how well the items hang together as a
set and can independently measure the same
concept, so respondents attach the same overall
meaning to each of the items
27Forms of validity
- Face validity
- That quality of an indicator that makes it seem a
reasonable measure of a variable. - Criterion related validity
- The degree to which a measure relates to some
external criterion. For example, the validity of
the VCE tests is shown in their ability to
predict the college success of students.
28Forms of validity (cont.)
- Construct validity
- The degree to which a measure relates to other
variables as expected within a system of
theoretical relationships. - Content validity
- Refers to how much a measure covers the range of
meanings included within a concept.
29Evaluating potential secondary data sources
- Assess overall suitability of data to research
question(s) and objectives - Measurement validity, coverage
- Evaluate precise suitability of data for analyses
needed to answer research question(s) and to meet
objectives - Validity, reliability, measurement bias
- Judge whether to use data based on an assessment
of costs and benefits in comparison with
alternative sources - If you consider the data are definitely
unsuitable DO NOT proceed beyond this stage
30Unions - Content validity
- Includes various measures of
- Job satisfaction
- Atittudes towards trade unions
- Perceptions of class
- Employment situation
- Related attitudes
- No direct measure of union instrumentality
- Need to use proxy work instrumentality
31Conclusions
- Secondary data can save time, money and effort
- However, it needs to be carefully assessed for
suitability - Be sure to check the research methodology used to
collect the data
32Sources
- Veal (2005) Chapter 5
- Saunders, Lewis and Thornhill (2003), Chapter 7