Title: Surveys, Field Research
1Research Methods
- Surveys, Field Research Secondary Data
2Week 6 Lecture outline
- Survey data collection methods
- Types of Surveys
- Field Research
- Secondary Data
- Class Round on Methods
3Topics appropriate to survey research
- Counting crime asking people about
victimization counters problems of data collected
by police - Self-reports dominant method for studying the
etiology of crime - Frequency/type of crimes committed
- Prevalence (how many people commit crimes)
committed by a broader population
4Topics appropriate to survey research
- Perceptions and attitudes to learn how people
feel about crime and CJ policy - Policy proposals search for ways to respond to
crime that are supported by the general public - Targeted victim surveys used to evaluate policy
innovations program success - Other evaluation uses e.g., measuring community
attitudes, citizen responses, etc.
5Open- and close-ended questions
- Open-ended respondent is asked to provide his
or her own answer - What were your initial expectations of the
program? - ________________________________________________
- Closed-ended respondent selects an answer from
a list or scale - On a scale of 1 to 5, where 1 is low and 5 is
high, rate your initial expectations of the
program.
1 2 3 4 5
Low High
6Open versus closed?
- Choice between these question types will depend
on the aim of your research, the study design,
the population being study, etc. - Advantages and disadvantages to both.
- Possible gains in reliability (closed-ended)
balanced with possible losses in breadth of
information and validity. - One strategy is to combine open- and close-ended
questions.
7Designing questions
- Make items clear avoid ambiguous questions do
not ask double-barreled questions - Short items are best respondents like to read
and answer a question quickly - Avoid negative items leads to misinterpretation
- Avoid biased items and terms do not ask
questions that encourage a certain answer - Closed question response categories must be
exhaustive and mutually exclusive.
8Survey data collection methods
- 1. Self-administered
- 2. In-person interview
- 3. Telephone interviews
- Focus Australias National Crime Victimization
Survey Methodology
9Australias Crime Victimization Survey
- The MPHS was conducted as a supplement to the
monthly LFS. - Each month one eighth of the dwellings in the
LFS sample were rotated out of the survey. - In 2012-13, all of these dwellings were selected
to respond to the MPHS each month - . In these dwellings, after the LFS had been
fully completed for each person in scope and
coverage, a person aged 15 years and over was
selected at random (based on a computer
algorithm) and asked the various MPHS topic
questions in a personal interview. - If the randomly selected person was aged 1517
years, permission was sought from a parent or
guardian before conducting the interview. If
permission was not given, the parent or guardian
was asked the crime questions on behalf of the
1517 year old. - Questions relating to sexual assault, alcohol or
substances contributing to the most recent
physical or face-to-face threatened assault were
not asked of proxy respondents. Only those
persons aged 18 years and over were asked
questions on sexual assault. - Data was collected using Computer Assisted
Interviewing, whereby responses were recorded
directly onto an electronic questionnaire in a
notebook computer, usually during a telephone
interview.
10A Link to the USA National Crime Victimization
Survey
- http//www.bjs.gov/index.cfm?tydcdetailiid245
11(No Transcript)
12UCR and NCVS
- UCR data are based on reported criminal acts
(offender characteristics) - NCVS data based on individuals actually
victimized (characteristics of victims)
13Assessment of NCVS
- Document a massive amount of crime that goes
unreported - Underestimate crime rate
- Insignificant crimes tend to be forgotten
- Victims of several crimes may also forget about
all the crimes - Females do not report victimization if her abuser
live in the same household - Whites and college graduates are more likely to
report being victimized
14Assessment of NCVS
- NCVS respondents are interviewed every six months
(7 interviews) - Reported victimization rates usually decease with
each interview (awareness of victimization) - Overestimation of some crimes
- Respondents might mistakenly interpret some
noncriminal events as crimes - Telescoping effect
15Self-reports data
- Created to complement UCR and NCVS
- Interviews or questionnaires
- Demonstrate the prevalence of offending (the
proportion of respondents who have committed a
particular offence) - Incidence of offending (the average number of
offences per person in the study)
16Samples for self-reports
- Target Adult inmates of jails and prisons PREA
findings on sexual assault - Target Adolescents, usually high school students
- The most important finding delinquency is very
common - Middle-class youth commit as much crime as
working-class youth - Testing criminological theories Travis Hirschis
Research Study testing Control Theory( compared
to subculural Strain)
17Assessment of self-report studies
- Focus on minor and trivial offenses (truancy,
running away from home, minor drug and alcohol
use) - Although recent studies (NYS) asked subjects
about rape and robbery - Respondents might not to tell the truth
(reliability issues)
18If respondents lie.
- Self-report data can be checked against police
records, school records, interviews with teachers
and parents - The use of, or threat of , polygraph validation
(20 change their initial responses when
threatened with a lie detector) - Subsequent interviewing of subjects permits
probing regarding the details and context of acts - Use of lie scales
19Focus Self Reported Substance Use Among
Detainees in Australia
- http//www.aic.gov.au/media_library/conferences/ev
aluation/mcgregor.pdf - http//192.190.66.70/documents/7/E/8/7B7E8D4A8E-A
5AF-4D3B-8821-ED8A1BA489B67Drpp93.pdf
20UCR, NCVS, and self-reports
- None of the three is perfect
- For the best estimates of the actual number of
crimes, NCVS data are preferable - For the best estimates of offender
characteristics, self-reports and NCVS are
preferable - UCR are superior for understanding the
geographical distribution of crime
21Self-administered questionnaires
- Can be home-delivered
- Researcher delivers questionnaire to home of
sample respondent, explains the study, and then
comes back later - Mailed (sent and returned) survey is most common
- Researchers must reduce the trouble it takes to
return a questionnaire - Goal is High Response Rate
22Computer-based self-administration
22
- Via email, website
- Issues
- representativeness
- mixed in with, or mistaken for, spam
- requires access to Web
- sampling frame?
23 Week 7 More Survey Research
- What we will Cover
- 1.Interviewing techniques and Focus Groups
- 2. A Comparison of Survey Methods phone/
computer( survey monkey), mail, and in-person - 3. Field Research The good, the bad, and the
ugly - 4. Agency Records, Content Analysis and Secondary
Data
24In-person interview survey
24
- Typically achieve higher response rates than mail
surveys (80-85 is considered good) - Demeanor and appearance of interviewer should be
appropriate interviewer should be familiar with
questionnaire and ask questions precisely - When more than one interviewer administers,
efforts must be coordinated and controlled - Practice interviewing
25Specialized interviewing
25
- Two variations
- General interview guide less structured, lists
issues, topics, questions you wish to cover no
standardized order - Standardized open-ended interview more
structured, specific questions in specific order
useful in case studies, retrieves rich detail in
responses
26Telephone surveys
26
- 94 of all households now have telephones
- Random-Digit Dialing
- Obviates unlisted number problem
- Often results in business, pay phones, fax lines
- Saves money and time, provides safety to
interviewers, more convenient - may be interpreted as bogus sales calls ease of
hang-up
27Comparison of the three methods
27
- Self-administered questionnaires are generally
cheaper, better for sensitive issues than
interview surveys - Using mail local and national surveys are same
cost - Interviews more appropriate when respondent
literacy may be a problem, produce fewer
incompletes, achieve higher completion rates - Validity low in survey research reliability high
- Surveys are also inflexible, superficial in
coverage
28Tips on self-report items
28
- Convince subjects you will guarantee
confidentiality and anonymity - Minimize possible social undesirability you are
asking respondents to admit - Phrase questions in non-judgmental manner
- Bear in mind fading memory when setting time
frame
29Focus groups
29
- 12-15 people brought together to engage in guided
group discussion of some topic( e.g. addicts
recovery) - Members are selected to represent a target
population, but cannot make statistical estimates
about population - Most useful when precise generalization to larger
group is not necessary - May be used to guide interpretation of
questionnaires following survey administration - Examples Drug addicts and reentry, homeless sex
offenders, teenagers and sexting
30Getting Out
31Field Research
- Field research encompasses two different methods
of obtaining data - Direct observation
- Asking questions
- May yield qualitative and quantitative data
- Often no precisely defined hypotheses to be
tested - Can be used to make sense out of an ongoing
process
32Topics Appropriate to Field Research
- Gives comprehensive perspective enhances
validity - Go directly to phenomenon, observe it as
completely as possible - Especially appropriate for topics best understood
in their natural setting - How street-level drug dealers distinguish
customers - Studies of vice, e.g., prostitution and
drug-use. - Aspects of physical settings, Disney World,
social control
33Various Roles of the Observer (Gold, 1969)
- Complete participant participates fully true
identity and purpose are not known to subjects - E.g., posing as a bar patron becoming a police
officer or corrections worker - Participant-as-observer make known your
position as researcher and participate with the
group - E.g., study of active drug users Julie Mueler
and the Guardian Angels - Observer-as-participant make known your
position as a researcher do not actually
participate - E.g., Observational study of police
patrolride-along research on gangs - Complete observer observes without becoming a
participant - E.g., court observation, Chicago neighbourhood
study( windshield studies)
34Observer status
- Be aware of, and document role of researcher
(extent of participation) - Be aware that all observation is subjective.
- Be aware of the possible effect of
participation. - Be aware of often competing ethical and
scientific values related to all observational
studies.
35Asking Questions
- Field research is often a matter of going where
the action is and simply watching and listening - Also a matter of asking questions recording
answers - Field research interviews are much less
structured than survey interviews - Ideally set up and conducted just like a normal,
casual conversation
36Preparing for the Field
- Access to formal organizations
- Find a sponsor, write a letter to executive
director, arrange a phone call, arrange a meeting - Access to subcultures
- Find an informant (e.g., person who works with
offenders), use that person as your in - Snowball sampling is useful as informant
identifies others, who identify others, etc.
37Sampling in Field Research
- Controlled probability sampling used rarely
purposive sampling is common - Bear in mind two stages of sampling
- To what extent are the situations available for
observation representative of the general
phenomena you wish to describe and explain? - Are your actual observations within those total
situations representative of all observations?
38Recording Observations
- Note taking, tape recording when interviewing and
when making observations - Videotaping or photographs can make records of
before and after some physical design change - Field notes observations are recorded as
written notes, often in a field journal first
take sketchy notes and then rewrite your notes in
detail - Structured observations observers mark
closed-ended forms, which produce numeric measures
39Linking Field Observations and Other Data
- Useful to combine field research with surveys or
data from official records - Baltimore study of the effects of neighborhood
physical characteristics on residents
perceptions of crime problems (Taylor, Shumaker,
Gottfredson, 1985) - Perceptions surveys
- Physical problems (1) observations, (2) actual
population and crime information - census data
crime reports from police records
40Strengths and Weaknesses of Field Research
- Provides great depth of understanding
- Flexibility (no need to prepare much in advance)
- More appropriate to measure behavior than surveys
- High validity quant. measures incomplete
picture - Low reliability often very personal
- Generalizability personal nature may produce
findings that may not be replicated by another - Precise probability samples cant normally be
drawn
41Other Sources to Consider
- Agency Records, Content Analysis and Secondary
Data
42Secondary Data
- Data from agency records agencies collect a
vast amount of crime and CJ data - Secondary analysis analyzing data previously
collected - Content analysis researchers examine a class of
social artifacts (typically written documents)
43Topics Appropriate for Agency Records
- Most commonly used in descriptive or exploratory
studies - Content analysis often center on links between
communication, perceptions of crime problems,
individual behavior, CJ policy
44Types of Agency Records
- Published Statistics govt organizations
routinely collect and publish compilations of
data (e.g., ABS, BOCSAR, AIC) often available in
libraries and online - Nonpublic Agency Records agencies produce data
not routinely released (e.g., police departments,
courthouses, correctional facilities) - New Data Collected by Agency Staff collected
for specific research purposes less costly
more control
45Units of Analysis in Criminal Justice Data
- Criminal Activity
- Incidents
- Crimes violated
- Victims
- Offenders
- Court Activity
- Defendants
- Filings
- Charges and Counts
- Cases
- Appearances
- Dispositions
- Sentences
- Apprehension
- Arrests
- Offenders
- Charges
- Counts
- Corrections
- Offenders
- Admissions
- Returns
- Discharges
46Sources of Reliability and Validity Problems
- Virtually all CJ record keeping is a social
process social production of data - Records reflect decisions made by CJ personnel as
well as actual behavior by juveniles and adults - Discretion factors in to recordkeeping
- CJ organizations are more interested in keeping
track of individual cases than in examining
patterns - Potential for clerical errors due to volume of
data
47Content Analysis
- Systematic study of messages can be applied to
virtually any form of communication - Decide on operational definitions of key
variables - Decide what to watch, read, listen to time
frame - Analyze collected data
- Well suited to answer who says what, to whom,
why, how, and with what effect?
48Aspects of Sampling and Coding in Content
Analysis 2
- Reminders
- Remember operational definition of variables, and
their mutually exclusive exhaustive attributes - Pretest coding scheme
- Assess coding reliability via intercoder
reliability method and test-retest method
49Secondary Analysis
- Sources websites, libraries
- AIC, http//www.aic.gov.au/
- BOCSAR, http//www.bocsar.nsw.gov.au/
- BJS, NCVS, ICPSR, NACJD
- Advantages cheaper, faster, benefit from work
of skilled researchers - Disadvantages data may not be appropriate to
your research question least useful for
evaluation studies (which are designed to answer
specific questions about specific programs)
50Class Round
Whats the most appropriate method(s) for
investigating your research evaluation
question(s)?