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Outline of Course

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Theoretical underpinnings of the use of Questionnaires and Interviews as ... Do unto your respondents as you would have them do unto you! Telephone Surveys. Advantages ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Outline of Course


1
Outline of Course
  • Basic principles of Survey Design and Analysis
  • Theoretical underpinnings of the use of
    Questionnaires and Interviews as methodological
    tools for gathering data.
  • Assignment Develop a questionnaire and short
    interview schedule and conduct a survey
  • Quantitative and Qualitative analysis techniques
    will be covered using SPSS and nVivo software
    respectively. 

2
Learning Outcomes
  • Understand the key principles informing survey
    design
  • Have designed and administered a survey of your
    own
  • Be able to critique the process of survey design,
    administration and analysis
  • Have a basic understanding of the contribution of
    both quantitative and qualitative methods in
    conducting surveys

3
Course Outline
  • Mondays Wednesdays 5 weeks
  • Last week deferred for a week
  • Theory Discussion
  • Application
  • Use of small groups and class group to design
    survey and develop questionnaire
  • Assignment Critique of the process

4
Reference Book
  • Mail and Internet Surveys, 2nd Edition, Don
    Dillman, Wiley, 2000
  • Acknowledgements Myra ORegan, Aideen Keaney,
    TCD

5
Exercise
  • What makes you answer a questionnaire?

6
The Process
  • What is the research question?
  • What did others do?
  • How are you going to answer the question?
  • How are you going to collect the data?
  • How are you going to analyse the data?
  • Writing up the results
  • Dissemination

7
Methods of Data Collection
  • Postal
  • Self Completion
  • Face to Face Interview
  • Email
  • Web
  • Telephone

8
Criteria for evaluating methods
  • Sample, facility to include questions, quality of
    data, administrative goals, respondents
    perspective

9
Sample
  • Opportunity for inclusion is known
  • Selection within sampling is controlled
  • Respondents are likely to be located

10
Comparative modes
11
Questionnaire issues
  • General flexibility of method
  • Allowable length of questionnaire
  • Ability to control question sequence
  • Ability to ensure question completion

12
Facility to Include Question Types
  • Complex questions
  • Open-ended questions
  • Screening questions
  • Tedious boring questions
  • Visual questions

13
Quality of data
  • Odds of avoiding social desirability bias
  • Odds of avoiding interviewer bias
  • Odds of avoiding contamination by others

14
Criteria for evaluating methods Administrative
goals
  • Odds of meeting personnel requirements
  • Odds of meeting technology requirement
  • Odds of keeping cost low

15
Respondent point of view
  • Privacy
  • Time to formulate answers
  • Response rates
  • Requirement for reading and writing
  • Judgement of quality of response
  • Importance of layout
  • Ability to ask for clarification

16
Golden Rule
  • Do unto your respondents as you would have them
    do unto you!

17
Telephone Surveys
  • Advantages
  • Computers can dial potential respondents
  • Computers can structure questions and record
    responses
  • Can contact ex-directory respondents
  • Disadvantages
  • Not good for visual material
  • May be inappropriate for personal or sensitive
    questions
  • Miss members of public without telephones

18
Mail surveys
  • Advantages
  • Least expensive method for lengthy Qs
  • Need minimum staff and facilites
  • Respondents have time to think
  • Disadvantages
  • Response rates tend to be lower
  • Need address list
  • Cannot be sure who completed Qe

19
Face to Face interviews
  • Advantages
  • Good for long and complicated questionnaires
  • Good for specific materials
  • Good for increasing co-operation
  • Disadvantages
  • Time consuming
  • Expensive
  • Interviewers needs training

20
Purpose of Questionnaire
  • To obtain accurate information from all of a
    sample
  • To convert the information needed into a set of
    specific questions that respondents can and will
    answer
  • Must encourage the respondent to give the
    information
  • Must minimize boredom, fatigue and non-response
  • Provides a standard format on which all
    information can be recorded

21
Beginning the Process
  • Clear research questions list them
  • Identify your respondents
  • Decide on method of administration
  • Talk to interested parties

22
Start designing your survey
  • Identify your research questions
  • Identify your target sample
  • Explore how to access your respondents
  • Pencil paper questionnaire
  • Electronic survey
  • Discuss in small group

23
Tasks in constructing Questionnaire
  • Sections list variables
  • Tips Draw up tables for results to see what
    they will look like
  • Comparisons with previous research search for
    existing questions/scales
  • Draft new questions for each variable
  • Type of question open vs closed

24
Tasks contd.
  • Decide on question working
  • Decide on form of response
  • Decide on question sequence
  • Precode the questionnaire if appropriate
  • Decide on layout
  • Write cover letter
  • Test test test and administer

25
Challenge
  • To obtain all the necessary information without
    obtaining unnecessary data

26
Criteria for assessing questions 1
  • Does the question require an answer?
  • To what extent do respondents have an accurate
    ready made answer?
  • Can people accurately recall past behaviours?
  • Is the respondent willing to reveal the requested
    information?
  • Will the respondent feel motivated to answer each
    question?

27
Criteria for assessing questions 2
  • Is the respondents understanding of response
    categories influenced by more than words?
  • Is the survey information being collected by more
    than one mode?
  • Is changing a question acceptable to survey
    sponsor?

28
Open Questions 1
  • Completely Open
  • Suggest improvements to service
  • Word Association
  • What is the first thing that comes to mind when
    you hear the following?
  • BMW
  • Ford
  • Porsche
  • Sentence Completion
  • I would prefer to drive a Ford to a BMW because..

29
Open Questions 2
  • Allows respondent to answer in own words, no
    influence
  • Answers depend on how much respondents are
    willing to think
  • Unanticipated responses
  • Does not restrict to specific options
  • Useful to give examples of answers in report

30
Open Questions 3
  • When not possible to design closed
  • Useful in pilot ot develop list of possible
    options for closed question
  • More detailed info but takes more time for both
    respondent and you
  • Depends on articulateness of respondent
  • Depends on ability to record responses verbatim
  • More difficult to code

31
Closed Questions
  • Harder to develop have to ensure that all
    potentially important response alternatives are
    included
  • Responses may be influenced by options provided
  • Easier to code to record
  • Less margin of error in recording

32
Open Vs Closed
  • Open ended more costly, take longer to elicit,
    record code. May gather superfluous data
  • Closed more economical, more risk of bias and
    restricted responses.
  • Open closed can complement each other well
  • Open to explore unknown issues Closed to test
    hypotheses

33
Exercise
  • Closed Questions
  • Devise 6 questions
  • 3 questions 2 choices
  • Yes/no
  • Agree/disagree
  • 3 questions 5 choices
  • strongly agree/agree/not sure/agree/disagree/
    strongly disagree
  • Ask your partner
  • Open Questions
  • Devise 3 questions
  • Ask your partner
  • Think about how to categorise and code responses
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