Questionnaire Construction
contingency questions
-a survey questions intended for only some respondents, determined by their response -follow up question is the contingency question
precoding and data processing
-afterwards, questionnaires are coded into computer using numbers -can cut data entry costs by precoding response -reserve room for large number of open ended questions
"mask" sensitive questions
-arrange critical questions randomly in set of unrelated questions -sometimes fine to leave sensitive questions for the end
double-barreled questions
-asking about several issues at once -"Do you use condoms to avoid STD's?"
questionnaire introduction
-can be spoken or read to respondents, or a cover letter in case of mail surveys -must convince respondent to cooperate -clear and simple statement of purpose -must disarm fears or suspiciousness about motives of researcher
leading questions
-do not bias questions and lead respondents -don't associate questions with an influential group -questions should be neutral
question order
-in general, order from general to specific -depending on population, may want to start or end with demographic questions -questions about same topic should be linked together -yes/no questions v.s. Likert scale -the number of points in the Likert scale
matrix questions
-number of questions with same response options and instructions
length and fatigue
-questionnaire should be short -items simple -15 minutes or less time frame -never ask anything research design does not require
vague questions
-questions should be concrete and explicit -no ambiguity
long list of alternatives
-respondents deal best with small number of judgements (1-5, 1-10)
complex instructions
-some questions require example before reply -instructions should be no more than 3-4 sentences
"strange" response requirements
-some response measures may not be familiar to a person, so provide examples and instructions -"although a little hard, choose what fits best"
closed ended questions
-survey questions in which the respondent is asked to select an answer from among a list provided by the researcher -easier and cheaper -restrictive
coding
-the process of assigning meaning (numerical or verbal) to survey answers
social desirability
-try to phrase questions so as to avoid demand characteristics
general questionnaire format
-uncluttered -1 question per line -consistent format
question wording
-vocabulary and style (simplest language possible, avoid jargon or slang, not too long sentences, 12 year old should understand)
designing questions for survey research
1. types of questions -quality depends on the types of questions asked, the way questions are constructed, and the question format that will be used 2. question construction 3. question strategies and format
tunnel
asks series of questions organized similarly
funnel
begins with broad and open questions then narrow closed ended questions -best with sensitive material
inverted funnel
first narrow closed ended question then open ended question -course evals -long questionnaires
open ended questions
questions for which the respondent is asked to provide his/her own answers -harder to handle -rich source of information -should be used sparingly