Title: Chapter 11 Direct Data Collection: Surveys and Interviews
1Chapter 11Direct Data Collection Surveys and
Interviews
2The Benefits Of Direct Data Collection
- Surveys and interviews are key in social
science data collection because they allow
researchers to directly ask what they want, the
way they want to.
Zina OLeary (2009) The Essential Guide to Doing
Your Research Project. London Sage
3Surveying
- Surveying involves gathering information from
respondents related to their characteristics,
attributes, how they live, opinions, etc. through
administration of a questionnaire.
Zina OLeary (2009) The Essential Guide to Doing
Your Research Project. London Sage
4Survey Types
- Surveys can
- reach a large number of respondents
- generate standardized, quantifiable, empirical
data - as well as some qualitative data - and offer confidentiality / anonymity.
- They can be
- descriptive or explanatory
- involve entire populations or samples of
populations - capture a moment or map trends
- administered in a number of ways.
Zina OLeary (2009) The Essential Guide to Doing
Your Research Project. London Sage
5Surveys
- Conducting a survey capable of generating
credible data requires - thorough planning
- meticulous instrument construction
- comprehensive piloting
- reflexive redevelopment
- deliberate execution
- and appropriate analysis.
Zina OLeary (2009) The Essential Guide to Doing
Your Research Project. London Sage
6Questionnaire Development
- Questionnaire development should begin by
turning to relevant literature in a search for
existing instruments that might be drawn upon. - Questionnaire development begins with concept
operationalization (turning abstract concepts
into measurable variables). This often involves
construction of various scales such as Likert,
Guttman, and Thurstone.
Zina OLeary (2009) The Essential Guide to Doing
Your Research Project. London Sage
7Questions to Avoid
- Poorly worded questions
- complex terms and language
- ambiguous questions
- double negatives
- double-barreled questions.
- Biased/ leading/or loaded
- ring true statements
- hard to disagree with statements
- leading questions.
- Problematic for the respondent
- recall dependent questions
- offensive questions
- questions with assumed knowledge
- questions with unwarranted assumptions
- questions with socially desirable responses.
Zina OLeary (2009) The Essential Guide to Doing
Your Research Project. London Sage
8Response Categories
- Survey questions can either be open or
closed - Open questions - These questions ask respondents
to construct answers using their own words. Open
questions can generate rich and candid data, but
it can be data that is difficult to code and
analyze. - Closed questions - These questions force
respondents to choose from a range of
predetermined responses, and are generally easy
to code and statistically analyze.
Zina OLeary (2009) The Essential Guide to Doing
Your Research Project. London Sage
9Response Categories for Closed Questions
- Yes / No - Agree / Disagree
- Do you drink alcohol? Yes/ No
- Â Fill in the blank
- How much to you weigh?
______________ - Choosing from a list
- What would you drink most often?
- Beer Wine Spirits Mixed
drinks Cocktails - Ordering options
- Please place the following drinks in order of
preference - Beer Wine Spirits
Mixed drinks Cocktails - Likert type scaling
- It is normal for teenagers to binge drink
- 1 2 3
4 5 - disagree unsure agree
strongly agree strongly disagree - Â
Zina OLeary (2009) The Essential Guide to Doing
Your Research Project. London Sage
10Additional Considerations in Survey Construction
- Providing clear background information and lucid
instructions - Logical organization
- Comprehensive coverage without undue length
- User friendly and aesthetically pleasing layout
and design.
Zina OLeary (2009) The Essential Guide to Doing
Your Research Project. London Sage
11Interviewing
- Interviewing involves asking respondents a series
of open-ended questions. - Interviews can generate both standardized
quantifiable data, and more in-depth qualitative
data.
Zina OLeary (2009) The Essential Guide to Doing
Your Research Project. London Sage
12Interview Types
- Interviews can range from
- formal to informal
- structured to unstructured
- can be one on one or involve groups.
Zina OLeary (2009) The Essential Guide to Doing
Your Research Project. London Sage
13Conducting an Interview
- Conducting an interview that can generate
relevant and credible data requires - thorough planning
- considered preparation of an interview schedule
and recording system - sufficient piloting
- reflexive modification
- the actual interview
- and appropriate analysis.
Zina OLeary (2009) The Essential Guide to Doing
Your Research Project. London Sage
14Conducting an Interview
- Conducting an interview can be an intimidating
experience that does get easier with practice. - It is worth remembering that the main
objective of any interview is to facilitate an
interviewees ability to answer.
Zina OLeary (2009) The Essential Guide to Doing
Your Research Project. London Sage
15Conducting an Interview
- Two important considerations in interviewing
are - Presentation of self
- Preliminaries
- be on time!
- set up and check equipment
- establish rapport
- introduce the study
- explain ethics.
Zina OLeary (2009) The Essential Guide to Doing
Your Research Project. London Sage
16The Questioning Process
- Listen more than talk
- Â In order to facilitate an interviewees ability
to answer you need to - ease respondents into the interview
- ask strategic questions
- prompt and probe appropriately
- keep it moving
- be true to your role
- wind it down when the time is right.
Zina OLeary (2009) The Essential Guide to Doing
Your Research Project. London Sage
17Remember
- Your interview should ease the respondent into
main questions and themes with sensitive
questions only coming after the interview is in
full swing. - The questions you ask should be ones that
facilitate rich answers. You will also need to
consider what means you will use to capture these
answers. - As an interviewer you will need to be true to the
researcher role and manage your subjectivities at
all times.
Zina OLeary (2009) The Essential Guide to Doing
Your Research Project. London Sage