Chapter 7: Survey Research
household drop-off survey
a paper-and pencil survey that is administered by dropping it off at the respondent's household and, either picking it up later, or having the respondent return it directly.
interval level response format
a response measured on an interval level, where the size of the interval between potential response values is meaningful. most 1-to-5 rating responses can be considered interval level.
to determine whether your respondent is qualified to answer your survey questions, you might
ask a filter or contingency question
when a survey question offers two possible responses, it is considered
dichotomous
3 ways to do an email survey
embedded in the email message and the respondent can reply to complete it, transmitted as an email attachment that the respondent can complete and return via email, or reached by providing a link in the email that directs the respondent to a website survey
true or false: the golden rule as applied to survey research means that you should always offer compensation to your respondents
false
a survey is a data collection tool used to
gather information from a population of interest
a survey is a measurement tool used to
gather information from people by asking questions about one or more topics
a focus group is a structured form of
group interview
survey design - determine
how you will analyze the data
questionnaires
instruments that the respondent completes; they are self-administered
3 types of interval level response formats
likert, semantic differential, cumulative or guttman scale
a survey asks respondents to "check all that apply" regarding a list of common household items they have used. those recorded answers would be considered
multioption or multiple-response variables
group-administered questionnaire
survey that is administered to respondents in a group setting.
the survey method depends on
target population, kind of information being sought, and the availability of resources (budget, time)
when we ask respondents to state their opinion in written form in a survey, we are asking for what type of response format?
unstructured
personal interview
a one-on-one interview between an interviewer and respondent.
nominal response format
response format that has a number beside each choice where the number has no meaning except as a placeholder for that response.
if a survey questions asks about two things in the same item, it is considered
a double barreled question
mail survey
a paper-and pencil survey that is sent to respondents through the mail.
telephone interview
a personal interview that is conducted over the telephone
focus group
a qualitative measurement method where input on one or more focus topics is collected from participants in a small-group setting where the discussion is structured and guided by a facilitator.
multi-option
a question format in which the respondent can pick multiple variables from a list
double-barreled questions
a question in a survey that asks about two issues but only allows the respondent a single answer.
single-option
a question response list from which the respondent can check only one response
response brackets
a question response type that includes groups of answers
interviews
a researcher asks the participants questions, then goes on to complete the instrument based on their answers
web survey
a survey that is administered over a website (either Intranet or Internet).
point-of-experience survey
a survey that is delivered at or immediately after the experience that the respondent is being asked about
dual-media survey
a survey that is distributed simultaneously in two ways.
group interview
administered to respondents in a group setting
email survey
any survey that is distributed to respondents via email.
confounding variable
any variable other than the dependent variable that can affect the outcome
a survey is a systematic way of
asking people to volunteer information regarding their opinions and behaviors
what survey response format would you choose if you wanted to know the types of small electronic appliance the respondent had purchased in the last year?
check the answer
***what is the rationale for experimentation?***
create = groups treat each group exactly the same besides the independent variable measure the dependent variable any difference is due to the independent variable
filter or contingency questions
determines whether respondents are qualified or experienced enough to answer a subsequent one
household drop-off surveys assures a ___ and allows ___
direct personal contact with the respondent; the respondent the time and privacy to respond to the survey on their own
two types of electronic surveys
email and web
true or false: the most important items should always be placed last in a survey so that respondents are sufficiently "warmed up" to the topic
false
true or false: the open-ended comments cards found in many businesses and restaurants are good examples of a structured-response format
false
types of structured questions
fill in the blank check the asnwer multi-option single-option
what kind of survey question helps you determine what the next question should be based on the response?
filter or contingency
which of the following is not a type of survey technique? mail survey group administered questionnaire telephone interview focus group
focus group
an interview looks like a questionnaire but also includes
instructions for the interviewer and space to record observations about how the interview progressed
likert-type response scale
items are assigned interval-level scale values and the responses are gathered using an interval-level response format.
cumulative or guttman scale
items are assigned scale values that allow them to be placed in a cumulative ordering with respect to the construct being scaled.
sampling issues
o what data is available? o can respondents be found? o who is the respondent? o can all members of the population be sampled? o are response rates likely to be a problem? o will incentives for participation help?
survey research is ___ in applied social research
one of the most important areas of measurement
how can you increase the likelihood that the respondent will respond truthfully to a question?
pose the question in terms of a hypothetical respondent
survey design - be specific about the
purpose
writing questions - determine
question content, scope, and purpose
a survey can be administered in two ways:
questionnaires and interviews
social desirability
researchers and respondents can both introduce bias and prejudices into the survey process. the bias that makes us want to look good is called
ordinal response format
respondents are asked to rank the possible answers in order of preference.
open ended question
respondents create their own answer
close ended question
respondents mark an existing answer
writing questions - choose a
response format that you use for collecting information from the respondent
semantic differential
scaling method in which an object is assessed by the respondent on a set of bipolar adjective pairs.
one of the most critical decisions in many social research contexts is
selecting the survey method
response format
the format you use to collect the answer from the respondent
sample
the units you select from the population
true or false: a dichotomous response format includes two possible option for response
true
true or false: most methodologists agree that audio- or video-taping your respondents is not advisable, because most people will be at least a little uncomfortable with being taped and may change their response as a result
true
survey design - focus on
what you need to know
writing questions - figure out how to
word the question
bias issues
• can social desirability be avoided? • can interviewer distortion and subversion be controlled? • can false respondents be avoided?
population issues
• can the population units be identified? • is the population literate? • are there language issues? • will the population cooperate? • what are the geographic restrictions?
content issues
• can the respondents be expected to know about the issue? • will the respondent need to consult records?
administrative issues
• costs • facilities • time • personnel
question issues
• what types of questions can you ask? • will filter questions be needed? • can question sequence be controlled? • will lengthy questions be asked? • will long response scales be used?