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Designing Data Collection Forms

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1 Designing Data Collection Forms
Chapter 11 Designing Data Collection Forms

2 The Functions of a Questionnaire
Translates the research objectives into specific questions Standardizes those questions and the response categories Fosters cooperation and motivation Serves as permanent records of the research Can speed up the process of data analysis Can serve as the basis for reliability and validity measures

3 The Questionnaire Development Process

4 Preliminary Considerations – Question Contents
Will the respondent understand the question? Does the respondent know the answer? Can the respondent recall the answer? The respondent must be willing to provide the information, e.g., the sensitivity issues— income, sex life, drug use, HIV,

5 Developing Questions Research Questions
A research question: is employed in research projects to obtain overt, verbal communication from individual study participants Its intended function is to elicit meaningful verbal responses from study participants. Research questions measure: Attitudes Beliefs Behaviors Demographics

6 “Shoulds” of Question Wording
Developing Questions “Shoulds” of Question Wording Question should be focused on a single issue or topic. Question should be brief. Question should be interpreted the same way by all respondents. Question should use respondent’s core vocabulary. Question should be a grammatically simple sentence if possible. Should use “mutually exclusive and collectively exhaustive categories”.

7 “Should Nots” of Question Wording
Developing Questions “Should Nots” of Question Wording Question should not assume criteria that are not obvious. Question should not be beyond the respondent’s ability or experience. Question should not use a specific example to represent a general case. Question should not ask the respondent to recall specifics when only generalities will be remembered. Question should not require the respondent to guess a generalization.

8 Questionnaire Organization Five Functions of Introduction-Cover letter
Identification of the surveyor/respondent Undisguised Disguised Purpose of survey Explanation of respondent selection Request for participation/provide incentive Incentives Anonymity Confidentiality Screening of respondent

9 Questionnaire Organization
Typical Question Sequence Approaches to Question Flow Work approach: is employed when the researcher realizes that respondents will need to apply different mental effort to groups of questions– from easy to difficult questions. Sections approach: organizes questions into sets based on a common objective of questions in the set

10 Precoding the Questionnaire
Precoding: placement of numbers on the questionnaire to facilitate data entry after the survey has been conducted Numbers are preferred for two reasons: Numbers are easier and faster to keystroke into a computer file Computer tabulation programs are more efficient when they process numbers

11 Computer-Assisted Questionnaire Design
Computer-assisted questionnaire design: software programs allow users to use computer technology to develop and disseminate questionnaires– “e.g., WebSurveyor, Survey Pro” Advantages: Easier Faster Friendlier More functionality

12 Computer-Assisted Questionnaire Design…cont.
Survey creation feature: Question list Question libraries Details Survey appearance Preview Publish Send notification

13 Computer-Assisted Questionnaire Design…cont.
Creation of data files and data collection Data analysis and reports Performing the pretest of the questionnaire

14 Designing Observation Forms
Observation forms: prepared for the researchers to record the behaviors observed by researchers in observation studies Structuring observational studies Build-up and break-down approaches Build-up: perform observations first, then build categories Break-down: categories are created before observation and provided on an observation record forms

15 Case 11.3 The Hobbit’s Choice
Please read Case 11.3 in p. 331. Analyze the case and then answer question 1.


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