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Published byNeal Banks Modified over 9 years ago
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Survey Methods So you want to do a Community Survey?
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Overview (I) Recognizing a need Willingness to commit people, time and money Appointing a planning commission Actions Community needs survey Gather general information Form planning advisory committee
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Overview (II) Public Participation Form citizen ’ s advisory committee Statement of goals and objectives from planning commission Modification of goals by governing body Planning commission prepares work schedule
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Phases of Participation Technical Data gathering Forecasting Analysis of facts and predictions General Generating public interest Eliciting public participation Creating public “ ownership ”
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Preparing the Survey Survey should elicit the goals and objectives for community Not the other way around
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Preparing the Survey Four simple rules to survey my community Guarantee anonymity Don ’ t force privacy issues Avoid ambiguous questions Consult with partners
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Preparing the survey Scoping the project Establish goals Determine sample Choose interview methodology Create questionnaire Pretest survey Conduct interviews / data entry Analyze data
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Establishing Goals Clear goals = useful survey results General survey instrument leads to weak findings Don ’ t be afraid to be specific
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Determining Sample Size Sampling Creating a representative sub-population We sample due to limitations of time, money and labor Considerations: Target population (varies with project) Sample size error
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Determining Sample Size Sample Size Calculator Sample Size Calculator Bias Issues Quotas Ensuring representation
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Sampling Random Systematic Stratified Random Clustered
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Interview Methods Personal Interviews Advantages Personal connection Targeted sampling Disadvantages Costly Environment influences effectiveness, bias
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Interview Methods Telephone Advantages Fast Randomness Data Entry Disadvantages Bad reputation Calling window limited (6-9)
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Interview Methods Mail Advantages Cheap Doesn ’ t require phone numbers Can include illustrative material Can be done at respondent ’ s convenience Disadvantages Time intensive Requires literate sample
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Interview Methods Computer-Direct Advantages Respondents do the data entry Privacy No interviewer bias Skip patterning possible High response rate
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Interview Methods Computer-Direct Disadvantages Computer literacy required General literacy required
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Designing the Survey Introductory message KISS Length and complexity hinders response rate & accuracy Allow respondents to “ opt out ” of a question But don ’ t allow a neutral response
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Survey Questions Multiple Choice Open Ended Numeric Text
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Survey Questions Multiple Choice Simple Allows you to control the response Requires to be as inclusive as possible Try not to steer respondent into neutral responses
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Survey Questions Numeric Open Ended Good for responses that require too many possibilities Income Text Open Ended Same as numeric Leaves open problems for data entry
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Survey Questions Rating and Agreement Scales Likert Scales Good for ordinal variables Good for preferences
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Survey Questions Order of questions Goal: get respondent to answer survey Goal: try not to bias responses Start with easy questions, end with more difficult/sensitive questions Try to vary questions with likely responses (habituation)
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Survey Questions Always keep in mind issues of data entry
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