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SURVEY RESEARCH BUSN 364 – Week 12 Özge Can. Survey Research  Asks a large number of people (respondents) the same questions about their beliefs, opinions,

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Presentation on theme: "SURVEY RESEARCH BUSN 364 – Week 12 Özge Can. Survey Research  Asks a large number of people (respondents) the same questions about their beliefs, opinions,"— Presentation transcript:

1 SURVEY RESEARCH BUSN 364 – Week 12 Özge Can

2 Survey Research  Asks a large number of people (respondents) the same questions about their beliefs, opinions, characteristics and past and present behaviors  Standard questionnaire forms  Self-reported beliefs and behaviors  Produce information that is statistical in nature => quantitative  Asks many questions at once, thereby measuring many variables => one can test multiple hypotheses  Alternative explanations are statistically controlled

3 What Is Asked in a Survey?  Behavior  How frequently do you brush your teeth?  Attitudes/beliefs/opinions  What is the biggest problem facing the youth today?  Characteristics  What is your age? Are you married or not?

4 What Is Asked in a Survey?  Expectations  Do you plan to buy a car in the next 12 months?  Self-Classifications  Which social class would you put your family into?  Knowledge  Who was elected as the city mayor in the last election?

5 Steps in Conducting a Survey (1):

6 Steps in Conducting a Survey (2):

7 Principles of Good Question Writing  Two key principles guide writing good survey questions:  Avoid any possible confusion  Keep the respondent’s perspective in mind  We want a survey to provide a valid and reliable measure:  Respondents should easily understand the question’s meaning as you intended (clear, relevant and meaningful) and answer completely and honestly

8 Principles of Good Question Writing 1. Avoid jargon, slang, abbreviations or acronyms  When surveying general public, use the language of popular culture 2. Avoid ambiguity, confusion and vagueness  “What is your income?” “Do you jog regularly?” 3. Avoid emotional language and prestige bias  “What do you think about paying murderous terrorists who threaten to steal the freedom of peace-loving people?”

9 Principles of Good Question Writing 4. Avoid double-barreled questions  “Does your employer offer pension and health insurance benefits?” 5. Avoid leading questions  “You don’t smoke, do you?” 6. Avoid questions beyond respondents’ capabilities  “How did you feel about your brother when you were 6 years-old?”  “How much was your electricty bill last year?”

10 Principles of Good Question Writing 7. Avoid asking about distant future intentions  “Suppose 8-years later you become a manager, how would you behave to your employees?” 8. Avoid double negatives  “I ain’t got no job”  “Do you agree or disagree that students should not be required to take a comprehensive exam to graduate?” 9. Avoid overlapping or unbalanced response categories  Make response choices mutually exclusive, exhaustive and balanced.

11 Getting Honest Answers  Sensitive Topics => Illness and disability (mental health problems, cancer), illegal or deviant behavior (drug or alcohol use, law violations), financial status (income, debts, occupation)  Threatens people’s presentation of themselves; their positive image. We should particularly cautious about these questions and the results. To increase honest answering: 1. Create comfort and trust 2. Use enhanced phrasing 3. Establish a desensitizing context 4. Use anonymous questioning methods

12 Getting Honest Answers  Social Desirability Bias => occurs when respondents distort answers to conform to popular social norms. They give a socially acceptable answer rather than an honest answer  Ex: people tend to overstate being highly cultured, being outgoing and fun, giving money to charity, having a good marriage, loving their children  One way to reduce it: phrase questions in ways that make norm violation appear less objectifiable and give respondents “face-saving” alternatives

13 Open-Ended vs. Close-Ended Questions I. Open-ended question:  A type of survey inquiry that allows respondents freedom to offer any answer they wish to the question II. Close-ended question:  A type of survey inquiry in which respondents must choose from a fixed set of answers  Partially open questions => a set of fixed choices with a final open choice of “other”

14 Open-Ended Questions

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16 Close-Ended Questions

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18 Valid Responses  Three types of answers from respondents yield invalid responses:  Swayed opinion => falsely overstating a position  False positive => selecting an attitude position but lacking any knowledge on the issue  False negative => respondent refuses to answer the question when he/she actually has information or an opinion  Neutral positions: Should we offer respondents who lack knowledge or have no position a neutral or “no opinion” choice?

19 Valid Responses  Response Set (Reponse Bias) => tendency of respondents to agree with every question in a series rather than carefully thinking through one’s answer to each  To avoid it: include different question types; change the sequence of response categories

20 Response Set Bias :

21 Valid Responses  To get valid responses:  Choose the appropriate response style for the question: agreement scales, rankings or ratings?  Present the alternatives fairly  Attach numbers to a response scale to assist respondents and give them a clue for understanding  Use visual presentations, colors, symbols and pictures  Appropriate question format and questionnaire design

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24 Valid Responses

25 Questionnaire Design Issues  Length of survey or questionnaire  No absolute proper length; it depends on the survey format (e.g. mail, internet) and respondent characteristics  Short questionnaires are appropriate for the general population  Question order and sequence  You should sequence questions to minimize respondent discomfort and confusion  After an introduction explaining the survey, make opening questions easy to answer and pleasent.  Order effect => answers to earlier questions can influence later ones

26 Questionnaire Design Issues  Layout and format  Questionnaire layout => Appearence of the questionnaire form should be clear, neat and easy to follow; sheets, fonts, envelope, cover letter...  Question format => Should respondents circle responses, check boxes, fill in dots or write in a blank?  Nonresponse  The failure to get a valid response from every sampled respondent = nonresponse bias  Can be a major problem if a high proportion of the sample does not respond; lowers generalizability

27 Ways to Increase Response Rate Address to specific individual Include a cover letter – Request cooperation – Guarantee confidentiality – Explain purpose – Provide researcher contact information Include postage-paid, addressed return envelope Easy to follow questionnaire Send follow-up reminders Avoid conducting study during busy holidays Back page for general comments Advertise legitimate sponsors (university, gov’t agency, etc.) Small monetary incentives

28 Types of Surveys  Mail surveys  Telephone surveys  Face-to-face surveys  Internet/web surveys

29 Types of Surveys  Features to consider when choosing a particular survey type:  Administrative issues => response rate, cost, speed, length  Researcher control on questions => explaining the questions, flexible formats  Success with different questions => open-ended questions, complex or sensitive questions  Sources of bias => social desirability, interviwer bias, respondent’s reading skills

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31 Constructing a Survey – Some Resources Many links for carrying out survey research: http://managementhelp.org/businessresearch/surveys.htm Information on designing surveys: http://www.sciencebuddies.org/mentoring/project_id eas/Soc_survey.shtml Online survey websites:  SurveyMonkey (www.surveymonkey.com)www.surveymonkey.com  PsychSurveys (www.psychsurveys.org)www.psychsurveys.org


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