Self Report Techniques Flashcards
What self report techniques are there?
- questionnaires
- interviews
What is a questionnaire?
-A set of written questions used to asses thoughts, emotions and the dependent variable that can be used in an experiment
What is a closed question?
What is an open question?
Closed question = A question that only allows for a fixed number of responses and produces quantitative, easy to analyse but it lacks depth
Open question = a question that produces qualitative data, it is rich in depth and difficult to analyse
Strengths of a questionnaire
- It is cost effective and can gather large amounts of data
- Participants can be anonymous therefore they are more honest which increases the validity of the findings
- It can be done with the researcher not being present which reduces effort involved
What are the disadvantages of a questionnaire?
- Social desirability might make results less valid as participants may give dishonest answers to be seen in a positive light
- participants may not understand questions and therefore the data produced by completing questionnaires may be invalid
- questionnaires usually produce response bias if there are to many questions to be completed therefore participants may rush the questionnaire and may produce invalid data.
What types of closed questions are there?
- Likert scales : a scale which can be from one number to another whether the participants agrees or disagrees
- Rating scales: similar to likert scales using values to represent feelings
- Fixed choice options: includes a list of possible options to pick from
What type of interviews are there?
- Structured interviews: compromised of predetermined questions that are asked in a fixed order.
- unstructured interviews: No set of questions, general aim is to ask questions about a certain topic and allow integration to be free flowing.
- semi-structured interviews: List of questions have been set in advance but interviewers are free to ask a follow up question to elaborate on a certain point
What are the advantages of an interview?
- if participants do not understand a certain question, it is easy for the interviewer to rephrase the question to make it understandable therefore more valid data can be gathered
- Follow up questions can be asked in a unstructured or semi structured interview which means more data can be gathered which gives us increased insight which increases validity of findings
What are the disadvantages of an interview?
- Social desirability may occur which can lead to less valid findings as people want to be seen in a positive light.
- Interviewer bias can occur as the interviewer will have control over the questions and can lead to invalid results this will mostly occur in a unstructured interview
- A structured interview is easily replicable as there is standardisation
What makes a bad interview?
- Overuse of Jargon: Technical terms that are only familiar to those within the specialist field should be avoided
- Emptive language: Language that produces certain feelings should be avoided as a result as it might not produce the response that a participant would have produced naturally
- Double- barrelled questions and double negatives: A doubled barrelled question contains two questions in one, this is difficult for respondents as they may agree with one half and disagree with the other half of the question.