RM - Self-report design Flashcards
What are closed questions?
Questions that have a predetermined range of answers from which respondents select one. They tend to produce quantitative data - but, for example, Yes/No answers are qualitative. Then they can be counted to produce quantitative data.
What type of data do closed questions produce?
They tend to produce quantitative data - but, for example, Yes/No answers are qualitative. Then they can be counted to produce quantitative data.
What are open questions?
Questions that invite respondents to provide their own answers rather than select one of those provided. They tend to produce qualitative data.
What type of data do open questions produce?
Qualitative
What is qualitative data?
Non-numerical data.
Information in words that cannot be counted or quantified. It can be turned into quantitative data by placing them in categories and counting frequency.
What is quantitative data?
Data measured in numbers.
Information that represents how much or how long, or how many, etc. there are of something, i.e. a behaviour is measured in numbers or quantities.
What three guideline principles are there when writing good questions?
Clarity
Bias
Analysis
What does clarity mean when writing a good question for a questionnaire?
Questions need to be written in a way that the reader (respondent) understands what is being asked.
There should be no ambiguity - something ambiguous has at least 2 possible meanings.
E.g. Did you see the girl with the telescope
This could mean did you see her when you were using the telescope or did you see the girl who was using the telescope.
The use of double negatives reduces clarity (using 2 negative words - such as, “banning capital punishment”).
Avoid double-barrelled questions: “do you suffer from sickness and headaches?”
Explain the guideline of bias in good question writing for questionnaires:
Any bias in a question might lead the respondent to be more likely to give a particular answer (as in a leading question).
Greatest problem is social desirability bias as respondents prefer to give answers that make them look more attractive, nicer, more generous, etc. rather than being totally truthful.
Why is analysis an essential guideline in good question writing for questionnaires?
Questions need to be written so that the answers are easy to analyse.
For example, if you ask ‘What do you like most about your job?’ or ‘What makes you feel stressed at work?’ you may get 50 different answers form 50 people - open questions.
You also may ask closed questions with a fixed range of answers. These may be easier to analyse but respondents may be forced to select answers that don’t represent their real thoughts or behaviour.
Apart from clarity, bias and analysis, what other things should a good questionnaire contain/consider?
Filler questions
Sequence for the questions
Sampling technique
Pilot study
Why are filler questions used in questionnaires?
Irrelevant questions to distract the respondents from the main purpose of the survey may reduce demand characteristics.
Why is the sequence of the questions in a questionnaire important and what should the sequence be?
Easy questions at the start saving the questions that may make someone feel anxious or defensive until the respondent has relaxed.
Why does the sampling technique need to be considered when doing a questionnaire?
i.e. how to select the respondents. Questionnaire studies often use stratified sampling.
Why is it important to consider carrying out a pilot study when writing/using a questionnaire?
The questions can be tested on a small group of people meaning that the questions can later be refined in response to any difficulties encountered.