Summary: Designing Surveys: A Guide To Decisions And Procedures | 9781412997348
- This + 400k other summaries
- A unique study and practice tool
- Never study anything twice again
- Get the grades you hope for
- 100% sure, 100% understanding
Read the summary and the most important questions on Designing Surveys: A Guide to Decisions and Procedures | 9781412997348
-
1 Survey Practice
This is a preview. There are 1 more flashcards available for chapter 1
Show more cards here -
What is a survey?
Surveys collect information by interviewing a sample of respondents from a well-defined population. -
What is the identifying characteristic of a survey interview?
De use of a fixed questionnaire with prespecified questions. -
What is a strength of observation versus surveys? What are two weaknesses of observation versus surveys?
Strength: not subject to reporting bias.
Weakness: can't measure mental states, not efficient for measuring infrequent behaviors. -
What are two strengths of focus groups versus surveys? What are two weaknesses of focus groups versus surveys?
Strength: can probe freely and go into depth, can see social dynamics.
Weakness: expensive, poor population coverage. -
What is a strength of panels versus surveys? What are two weaknesses of panels versus surveys?
Strength: shows changes over time.
Weakness: expensive, a limited number of people will participate. -
What is a strength of experiments versus surveys? What is a weakness of experiments versus surveys?
Strength: strong test of causation.
Weakness: difficult to do outside lab. -
Survey research is often a combination of disciplines, true or false?
True: surveys are usually a team effort of many people with diverse skills. -
What influences survey practice over time?
Cultural norms. Social norms. Societal changes (can occur at different rates in different parts of the population). Technical development. -
What are two ethical concepts central to the treatment of respondents?
1. Informed consent.
2. Confidentiality. -
What is the main concern in designing and conducting a survey?
To achieve the research of other date collection objectives within available resources.
- Higher grades + faster learning
- Never study anything twice
- 100% sure, 100% understanding
Topics related to Summary: Designing Surveys: A Guide To Decisions And Procedures
-
Survey Error
-
Planning the Survey: The Hierarchy of Decisions - The stages of a survey
-
Data collection: selecting a method
-
Sampling I: Concepts of sample representation and sample quality
-
Sampling II: Population definition and sampling frames - Defining the survey population
-
Framing the population - Problems with lists - Coping with omissions
-
Sampling II: Population definition and sampling frames - Framing the population - Framing the population without a list
-
Questionnaire development I: Measurement error and question writing
-
Questionnaire development II: questionnaire structure
-
Questionnaire development III: Pretesting - Conventional pretests and interviewer debriefings
-
Questionnaire development III: Pretesting - Postinterview interviews
-
Questionnaire development III: Pretesting - Behavior coding
-
Data collection II: Controlling error in data collection