Surveys and Questionnaires - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 51
About This Presentation
Title:

Surveys and Questionnaires

Description:

Surveys and Questionnaires Research Methods and Data College of Advancing Studies Brendan Rapple * 24 * 25 * 26 * 28 * 29 * 30 * 9 * 10 * 15 * 20 * * 23 * 24 * 25 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:113
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 52
Provided by: brendan3
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Surveys and Questionnaires


1
Surveys and Questionnaires
  • Research Methods and Data
  • College of Advancing Studies
  • Brendan Rapple

2
Surveys Provide Important Knowledge
  • Economists, psychologists, health professionals,
    political scientists, and sociologists conduct
    surveys to study such topics as
  • Income and expenditure patterns among households
  • Voting behavior
  • Effects on family life of women working outside
    the home, etc.
  • Auto manufacturers use surveys to find out how
    satisfied people are with their cars.
  • And a multitude of other topics
  • This presentation owes much to the American
    Statistical Association brochure series on survey
    research
  • http//www.amstat.org/sections/srms/whatsurvey.htm
    l

3
Specific Purpose Essential
  • Objectives of a survey should be as
  • Specific
  • Clear-cut
  • Unambiguous as possible

4
  • "Men's Health Practices" is a very nebulous
    topic.
  • Better
  • How often do African-American males aged 40-49
    visit the dentist?
  • Or
  • A survey of 50-60 year old male professors at BC
    about their weekly exercise habits

5
Steps in Conducting A Survey
  • Define precise purpose
  • Specify population
  • Specify appropriate sample
  • How to administer survey?
  • Draft of survey instrument
  • Pretest it
  • Revise it
  • Administer survey
  • Analyze, write it up, and communicate the results
  • Use results meaningfully

6
Decide on Mode of Data Collection
  • Mailed Questionnaire
  • Telephone
  • In Person Interview
  • Computer Questionnaire

7
Use Mailed/Computer Questionnaires or Not?
  • Perhaps better responses by phone -- but phone
    interviewing is very time-consuming.
  • On other hand, people tend to be more truthful
    with anonymous questionnaires.
  • Generally cheaper than one-on-one interviews.
  • Perhaps a mix of questionnaire and interviewing?

8
For All Surveys it is Essential to
  • explain purpose of survey very clearly and
    precisely.
  • explain any potential use the results will have
    for the respondents themselves.
  • stress voluntary nature - respondents are doing a
    favor to the researcher.
  • use letter-head official for a
    mailed/computer questionnaire.
  • explicitly promise confidentiality.
  • mention a clear expression of thanks.

9
Whatever Format Used . . . . . .
  • Important to specify a deadline for response.
  • Follow-up letter (e-mail) often advisable for a
    mailed/computer questionnaire
  • Always essential for PILOT STUDY or PRE-TEST
  • Main problems revolve about
  • Question content, e.g. confusion with overall
    meaning of question as well as misinterpretation
    of individual terms or concepts
  • Formatting, e.g. problems with how to skip or
    navigate from question to question may result in
    missing data and frustration for both
    interviewers and respondents.

10
Population ? Sample
  • Usually the population to be surveyed is too
    large.
  • Accordingly, one must select a smaller,
    representative sample.
  • This sample is usually just a fraction of the
    population being studied.

11
Samples
  • The quality of the sample whether it is
    up-to-date and complete is probably the
    dominant feature for ensuring adequate coverage
    of the desired population to be surveyed.
  • Must be representative of population.
  • Are the distributions of attributes, opinions,
    and beliefs in the sample the same as in the
    population?
  • You want to be able to make inferences about the
    population as a whole based on what you find to
    be true of the sample.

12
Variability
  • Variability is large, then sample should be large
  • Converse also true

13
2 Barrels of Apples
  • Barrel A (low variability) -- all apples about 5
    ins. in diameter (range 5.1 to 4.8 ins.)
  • Barrel B (high variability) -- apples range from
    2 to 6 ins. in diameter
  • Picking 3 apples from Barrel B might give result
    well below (above) average.

14
Still, Size of Sample Isn't Everything
  • Large numbers do not, in and of themselves,
    increase the representativeness of a sample.
  • Most professional survey conductors hold that a
    moderate sample size is enough statistically and
    operationally.

15
Representative Sample
  • Survey Success of unwed teenage mothers in a
    specific community in raising children?
  • To be representative, sample must contain same
    proportion of unwed teenage mothers at --each
    age level --each educational level --each
    socio-economic status in the community

16
Population -- Sample
  • It is essential that you select sample in such a
    way that every name on the population list has an
    equal chance of being included in the sample.

17
Random Sample
  • Example 500 part-time students in Advancing
    Studies
  • Sample of 20 is required
  • Assign each student a number from 1 to 500
  • Randomly select 100 numbers

18
Systematic Random Sampling
  • Example 1.
  • 2,000 in population and you want a sample of 200,
    then you might select every 10th name
  • Example 2.
  • 500 part-time students in Advancing Studies
  • Sample of 20 is required --Randomly Select a
    Number from 1 to 5 --Select Every 5th
    Person --002, 007, 012. 017, 022, and up to 497.

19
Possible Problem
  • Staff in govt. agency may be listed unit by unit
  • Each unit has 9 line-level workers and 1
    supervisor.
  • The supervisor is the 10th person on the list.
  • Its a survey of 20 -- every 5th person is
    selected.
  • If first no. selected is 1, 2, 3, or 4 then no
    supervisor will be selected, though they comprise
    10 of population.
  • If first number selected is 5, then supervisors
    will be greatly overrepresented.Thus,
    possibility of bias due to periodicity or
    patterns.

20
Stratified Sampling
  • Population 2,000 (800 females 1,200
    males)Sample required 200 If gender is an
    important variable in your survey, then both
    females and males should be included in
    appropriate numbers, that is, in proportions that
    correspond to their presence in the population.

21
Strategy
  • Treat both sexes as separate populations and
    take 10 sample from each. ORMake sure
    that all females are listed first and then take
    every tenth name.Either way you will end up
    with 80 females and 120 males

22
Convenience Sampling
  • Could ruin an otherwise well-conceived survey.
  • Its simple and cheap to select a sample of
    names from a phone-directory to find out which
    candidate people intend to vote for.
  • However, this sampling procedure could give
    incorrect results since persons without
    telephones or with unlisted numbers would have no
    chance to be reflected in the sample,
  • Their voting preferences might be quite
    different from persons who have listed
    telephones.

23
Confidentiality
  • Confidentiality of data supplied by respondents
    is of prime concern to all reputable survey
    organizations.
  • Important that individual respondents are not
    identified in reporting survey findings.
  • All of the surveys results should be presented
    in totally anonymous summaries, such as
    statistical tables and charts.

24
Problems with Volunteers
  • Example
  • TV programs asking viewers to vote.
  • people call who are most committed to issue.
  • stuffing of ballots by multiple calls.
  • Time of day is important whos available?

25
Margin of Error
  • Error margin of 1,000 randomly chosen individuals
    is said to be 3.1.
  • Thus, if a random sample of 1,000 indicates that
    59 will vote for Obama, the actual number could
    range from 55.9 to 62.1.

26
Questions in a Questionnaire Should Be
  • Woven together
  • Flow smoothly
  • Avoid confusion
  • A good questionnaire forms an integrated whole.

27
Different Understandings
  • Everyone should see/understand the exact same
    question no ambiguity.
  • But people from different backgrounds, with
    diverse frames of reference, may have different
    perceptions of the same question.

28
KISS PrincipleKeep It Simple, Statistician
  • Questions should be, as far as possible
  • Simple
  • Clear,
  • Easy to answer
  • Personally relevant to them
  • Often recommended that questionnaires be written
    at the 5th grade reading level

29
Avoid Ambiguity
  • Do you favor governmental involvement in health
    care?
  • What is your income? __________________
  • do you mean weekly monthly annual pre
    tax after tax from salary or from all
    sources

30
Another Example
  • (A blouse manufacturer wants to ascertain what
    type of sleeves teenage females prefer in their
    blouses) 1. Do you like short sleeve
    blouses? YES__ NO__2. Do you like long
    sleeve blouses? YES__ NO__3. Do you like
    sleeveless blouses? YES__ NO__

31
Another Example
  • Do you jog regularly? Problem, of course,
    lies with REGULARLY

32
Avoid jargon, slang, abbreviations
  • Plumbers talk about snakes
  • Psychologists about oedipus complex
  • Lawyers about mens rea

33
NATO usually means North Atlantic Treaty
Organization
  • But some respondents might take it to
    mean --National Auto Tourist Organization
  • --Native Alaskan Trade Orbit
  • --North African Tea Office

34
Types of Questions
  • Open-Ended Questions
  • What is your age?
  • What is the total turnover in your company?
  • Which of the four seasons do you prefer?
  • How would you spend a a 1,000,000 lottery win?

35
Disadvantages of Open-ended Questions
  • Variation in answers make coding/scoring
    difficult

36
Advantages of Open-ended Questions
  • Do not impose researcher's opinion on respondent
  • Can lead to a very precise answer

37
Forced-Choice Questions
  • How many books do you read each year? Please
    check as appropriate below ___ none
    ___ 1 to 5 ___ 6 to 10 ___ 11 to
    20 ___ more than 20

38
  • What do you recall about the frequency of
    snowfall in Boston during the winter of
    1994? ___ It snowed almost every day ___ It
    snowed about once a week ___ It snowed about
    once every two weeks ___ It snowed about once a
    month

39
Importance of Wording
  • Take a very simple question
  • How many drinks do you have each day? (Check
    one of the following)
  • ____ 5 or more ____ 4 ____ 3 ____
    2 ____ 1 ____ none

40
Better to Ask
  • Are your daily drinking habits reasonably
    consistent --i.e. do you take about the same
    number of alcoholic drinks each day?
  • _____ YES _____ NO (if you mark "NO,"
    skip the following question).

41
Checking Respondents' Consistency
  • Q. 4. Check one of the following _x_ I believe
    that manufacturing should be increasingly
    computerized, even if layoffs ensue.
  • ___ Preserving the jobs of workers is more
    important than computerizing
    manufacturing.Later on, the Questionnaire might
    ask
  • Q. 30. Check one of the following ___ I support
    G.M.'s increasing use of robotics, despite
    the resulting massive layoffs.
  • _x_ The government should force G.M. to curtail
    computerization to ensure a reduction in
    layoffs.

42
Avoid Emotional Language
  • What do you think about a policy to pay
    murderous terrorists who threaten to steal the
    freedoms of peace-loving people?Problematic
    Words murderous freedoms steal peace

43
Avoid Loaded Questions
  • "Should the mayor spend even more tax money
    trying to keep the streets in top shape?"
  • "Should the mayor fix the pot-holed and dangerous
    streets in our city?"

44

Arrangement Is Important
  • What is your present marital status?
  • 1 never married 2 married 3 divorced 4 separated
    5 widowed

45
A Better Arrangement Would Be
  • What is your present marital status? (circle
    number) 1. never married 2. married 3. di
    vorced 4. separated 5. widowed

46
Danger of Overlapping
  • Check How Many Children are in Your Family
  • a. 0-1 children
  • b. 1-2 children
  • c. 2 or more children

47
Avoid Prestige Bias
  • Most doctors say that cigarette smoke causes
    lung disease for those near a smoker. Do you
    agree?
  • Do you support the presidents policy regarding
    Zanozui?

48
Avoid Double-Barreled Questions
  • "Does your company have pension and health
    insurance benefits?"

49
Ranking Answers (Likert Scale Format)
  • Women should automatically receive three months
    maternity leave in your company
  • strongly agree partly agree
    disagree strongly
  • agree disagree
  • ___ ___ ___
    ___ ___

50
How often do you attend church?
  • Never Yearly Monthly
    Weekly Daily
  • ____ ___ ___ ___
    ___

51
Visual Analog Scales BIPOLAR scales
  • I see myself asExtremely Extremely
    interested in uninterested politics
    ______________________________ in politics
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com