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Principles of Instrument & Measurement Development Bonnie L. Halpern-Felsher, Ph.D. Professor University of California, San Francisco
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What should be considered when we develop an entire survey or instrument?
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Principles of Instrument Development
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Identify Research Aims/Questions What are the goals of your study? Are you exploring: –Patterns over time? –Within subject changes? –Associations or Predictions? Are your measures addressing these aims?
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Identify Conclusions, Discussion Points, & Implications What do you hope to conclude? Will your instrument and measures provide you with the information to make such conclusions?
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Know Your Research Design Quantitative, qualitative, mixed- methods? Cross-sectional? Repeated Measures? Longitudinal? –Interval between measurement waves?
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Longitudinal Studies In general, use identical measures over time. Can add or subtract items or measures. Can substitute measures for more developmentally appropriate ones, but must assure they are highly correlated.
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Know Your Research Subjects Children? Adolescents? Young adults? Age comparisons? Clinic sample? At-risk sample? School-based sample? Reading level?
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Identify & Define Constructs What are you trying to measure? Do constructs address research aims/questions? Can respondents answer questions? Will venue allow you to ask these questions? Are there existing measures for constructs? OR Need to develop new measures?
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Consider the Length of the Instrument Depends on the sample Depends on the administration method Depends on time and level of permission given
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Consider the Instrument Format Paper/pencil Web-based ACASI IPad
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Want an Interesting Instrument Pictures Mix of questions Mix of format Reduce redundancy
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Want Consistency across Measures within the Instrument Order of response (yes/no; scales)
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Principles of Measurement Development
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Measures need to provide answers containing important information that directly addresses research aims. Measures should provide comparable information about people, events or behavior. Measures should provide reliable and valid information.
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Provide Important Information Go back to research aims and questions.
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Provide Comparable Information All respondents must be answering the same question. All respondents must understand each item and attribute the same meaning to it. Assure that researchers and respondents are using the same definition.
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Provide Comparable Information - Will items produce meaningful information from adolescents and adults? Cannot conclude age or developmental differences if it is really just a reflection of interpretation.
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Respondents are Able to Respond Items are specific, not ambiguous. Respondents know and remember information. Minimize burden of recall. If recall is needed, help respondent: –Place events or behavior in time –Use memory aids
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Respondents are Able to Respond Examples: –Factual Data: SES, Parent Education, Income, Medical Data. Can ask the source (e.g., parents, teachers, chart reviews –Event-Specific Data: Since high school graduation… Since we last surveyed you… Provide calendars…
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Respondents are Willing to Respond Items should be written such that respondent does not feel the need to respond inaccurately. Assure confidentiality.
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Respondents are Willing to Respond Handling “Don’t Know” and “Not Sure” Responses: –Can provide a screening question –Can provide an option for N/A, None, Don’t Know –Don’t assume or judge
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For Next Week Find existing measures of interest Create/continue creating/find an instrument with: –At least 2: factual questions frequency and quantity questions “feelings” subjective questions Evaluative questions Scales
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For Next Week Keep in mind the principles of instrument and survey development when constructing your survey
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