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Scale of Measurement Survey Design Tips. Level of Measurement How much information a variable conveys about the difference among values The higher the.

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Presentation on theme: "Scale of Measurement Survey Design Tips. Level of Measurement How much information a variable conveys about the difference among values The higher the."— Presentation transcript:

1 Scale of Measurement Survey Design Tips

2 Level of Measurement How much information a variable conveys about the difference among values The higher the level of measurement, the more information is conveyed The level of measurement determines what kind of statistics can be used

3 Levels of Measurement Nominal Ordinal Interval Ratio Low High More Information

4 Nominal Variable Values are qualitatively different from each other “Qualitative” Variable “Naming/Labeling” Variable There is no particular way that values should be ordered

5 Example: Nominal Variable GENDER Values: Men / Women Men and Women are qualitatively different Cannot say which is better or higher

6 Example: Nominal Variable Entree Values: Meat, Fish, Veggie Meat, Fish and Veggie are just different Reorder values in any way

7 Ordinal Variable Values are different from each other not in quality but in magnitude Values can be ordered, e.g., High to low, small to large, good to bad, etc. “Ranking variable” “Ordering variable” Distance between values are not consistent

8 Example: Ordinal Variable Course Grade Values: A, B, C, D, F A is higher than B, B is higher than C, etc. The order is meaningful – Difference between B and C may not be equal to the distance between D and F

9 Interval/Ratio Variable Values are different from each other in quantity Values have a meaningful order and the distance between values are consistent “Quantitative” “Number” variable Interval Variable = Arbitrary Zero Ratio Variable = Meaningful Zero

10 Example: Interval Variable IQ Test Score IQ 120 is higher than IQ100 Difference between IQ 100 and 120 is the same as difference between IQ 80 and IQ 100 IQ zero does not mean no point or no intelligence

11 Example: Interval Variable Temperature (F) 80F is higher than 60F Difference between 60F and 80F is the same as difference between 40F and 60F 0 F does not mean “no temperature”

12 Example: Ratio Variable Weight 200 lb. is heavier than 100 lb. Difference between 100 lb. and 200 lb. is the same as difference between 200 lb. and 300 lb. 0 lb. means you have NO weight

13 Example: Ratio Variable Income ( in $) $50K is more than $30K. Difference between $50K and $30K is the same as difference between $50K and $80K $0 income means you have NO income

14 Why “Equal Distance” Matters? If the distance between values are equal, you are able to calculate (add, subtract, multiply, divide) values You can get a mean only for interval/ratio variables You can use wider varieties of statistics for interval/ratio variables

15 Summary Ratio Interval Ordinal Nominal Difference Order Equal Interval Meaningful Zero Calculate Info of difference among values Level of Measurement

16 Altering Levels of Measurement You can measure the same object at different levels of measurement If you measure a variable at the higher level, you can transform it into the lower level variable

17 Example: Income What was the amount of your income last year? US $ __________ Did your annual income exceed US $5K last year? 1.Yes 2.No What was the amount of your income last year? 1. Less than $3K 2. $3.1K - $5K 3. $5.1K - $10K 4. More than $10K RatioOrdinalNominal

18 Let’s Think …. Height (in inches) Color of eyes (black, brown, blue..) Size of Soda (S, M, L) Menu at Taco Bell (Soft taco, Crispy taco, Nachos,..) Commuting time (in minutes) Class standing (freshman, sophomore..) Major (FAMR, Fashion merchandise, …) Dress size (5, 7, 9…)

19 Variable and Values Age 0, 1, 2, …. 20, 21, 22, …, 40, 41, 42, ….60, 61, 62, …. Variable Values

20 Variable and Values Gender Male Female Variable Values

21 What do you need to do or consider to design a good survey?

22 Before Designing your questionnaire Review research questions and hypotheses Clear definition of what you are studying Clear operational definitions for the attitudes or behaviors being studied.

23 Designing your questionnaire Writing items –and REWRITING ITEMS Well-constructed items are easier to summarize, analyze, and interpret than poorly constructed ones. Pay now, or pay later!

24 Open ended (not answered by one word.. –Example: What do you think about the UH parking situation? Restricted or close-ended –Example: –Parking around campus is 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Difficult to find Easily available (example) Where do you drink? At home____ In bars____ At parties____ In restaurants____

25 Partially open-ended item –Other, specify____________ Rating scale 1 - 10 Scale Recommend 7 points with extreme word anchors Graphic line

26 Keep items simple Avoid biased wording No abbreviations Don’t phrase with negative –Should students not drink soft drinks for breakfast? Yes No –Better: Should students drink soft drinks for breakfast? Yes No Best: How often should students drink soft drinks for breakfast? 1 2 3 4567 NeverAlways

27 Your questionnaire should elicit responses you are most interested in without a lot of extra info Organize items on questionnaire Pilot test !!! Assess reliability and validity Revise questionnaire

28 Ethics Guarantee anonymity of your participants and confidentiality of their responses. Anonymity Guarantee that there will be no way for the participants’ names to be associated with their answers or their survey.

29 Ethics continued Confidentiality Guarantee to not disclose any data in individual form, even if you know which participants go with which surveys. Data are reported in group form only.


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