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ASSIGNMENT
3 SPECIFICATIONS
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EDF 5481 READINGS AND ASSIGNMENTS |
GUIDE 5: A SURVEY RESEARCH TIMETABLE |
OVERVIEW |
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EDF
5481 METHODS OF EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
INSTRUCTOR:
DR. SUSAN CAROL LOSH
FALL 2001
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In survey research, the investigator asks verbal questions and either an interviewer or the respondent records the answers.
If you do these two steps, you are conducting a survey, even if you call it a "standardized test" or embed a questionnaire inside your experiment. Public opinion surveys or polls are simply one special kind of survey, a survey that seeks to generalize its results to a well-defined general population. This means that no matter what you call your research, if you ask questions and record the answers, you must consider the same rules for good question format, and your data are subject to the same methodological problems as most other surveys are.
Be aware that you are "trying to hit a moving target" in a survey. People change their knowledge, belief, and attitude responses, in part because of the reactivity that occurs as a result of being studied. In terms of reactivity, surveys typically rank below experiments, but above field research such as ethnographies or more secondary collections, such as content analysis. And, of course, people change their beliefs and attitudes as they learn new things, or as a result of persuasion campaigns.
Everyone must be concerned about sampling issues. I elaborate upon them here because excellent sampling is a hallmark of general public opinion surveys. However, sampling directly addresses external validity, and thus is a feature of any kind of study design. Who wants to spend months doing a study, only to conclude that you can generalize to a particular group of students taking an online course and no one else? Most of us are more ambitious than that.
Because you typically deal with "organismic" or naturalistic variables, you have less internal validity in a survey than an experiment but possibly as much as a quasi-experiment. Statistical control, in which you measure as many intervening and confounding variables as possible, then statistically control these, typically substitutes for experimental control. Public opinion surveys generally define their populations very carefully and take careful samples from their populations, thus usually have very good, sometimes excellent, external validity.
Review the rules on causal inference and establishing independent or dependent variables in nonexperimental research HERE. Think about these rules when you consider variables to include as independent variables particularly. Be sure that you have included plausible independent variables.
Of course, you could embed an experiment within a survey, and randomly assign who gets which questionnaire version.
Consider what demographics "stand for" in survey research. Variables such as "age," "gender" or "ethnicity" are useful because they condition life experiences. Older people have different options, have had different life experiences, and are treated differently than younger people. People with different educational levels have had differential access to knowledge, and college students have experienced a whole different culture than those who never went to college. Thus, think about what each demographic stands for and see if you can directly include those variables in your study if they are relevant. (For example, if you believe that a key with "age" is experience handling money, such as wages, checking accounts, or credit, be sure that you include questions related to wages, checking accounts and credit, in addition to "years of age.")
There are several steps to conducting a survey. I give the most elaboration to those steps related to collecting data and the study design, leaving data management and statistics to your other methods courses.
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REVIEW THIS SITE: ASSIGNMENT 1: CONSTRUCTING A RESEARCH PROBLEM
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1. Define your population. Make your definition clear enough so that there is absolutely no question about who is or is not in the population.
3. Locate or construct the most thorough list of your population that you possibly can. This will become your "sampling frame." If a complete list is not possible, see if you can create sampling stages, and then completely enumerate all elements at each stage.
4. At about the same time, you must decide on the type of administration for your survey: self-administered (mail, group, and, increasingly, Internet) or interviewer-administered. Some types of samples, such as simple random samples, can be done with straightforward logistics by telephone (Random Digit Dial) but are often difficult to do in other circumstance (such as area in-person surveys).
5. Make final decision on type of sample to draw. Try for a probability sample. Accept that under certain circumstances this may not be possible. Decide whether in fact you are taking the entirety of a small population instead (a census).
6. Draw sample.
If appropriate, send out introductory letter.
Include inducements (shiny new quarter,
Barnes and Noble gift certificate!) if feasible.
SAMPLING COUNTS IN EXPERIMENTS TOO! EVEN IF YOU HAVE HIGH INTERNAL VALIDITY, YOU CAN'T LEGITIMATELY GENERALIZE IF YOUR SAMPLE IS POOR (LOW EXTERNAL VALIDITY). |
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SOME CONSIDERATIONS |
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INTERVIEWS |
INTERVIEWS |
| Inexpensive cost is over-rated. Postage, stationary, repeat mail-outs, inducements, raise the cost. | Cost is low but external validity may be low too. | Current predominant mode for administering general public surveys. Cheaper than in-person surveys. | Became prohibitively expensive due to more single-person households and employed wives leading to "not-at-home." |
| Response rates better if respondents motivated about topic and endorsement cover letter is present. | REMEMBER! Classes are cluster samples that underestimate population variability (unless corrected). | Callbacks typically needed. Overnight polls have poor response rates. | Callbacks needed; cluster samples cut costs THEN sample size is increased to compensate for cluster design effect on variance! |
| Once repeat mail-outs are included, can take several weeks (minimum) | Can be speedy but what about absences? Could they introduce biases? | Generally fastest method, even including callbacks. | Takes the longest to gather the same sample size, especially with callbacks. |
| Is your population literate? Can they easily read and respond? | Is your population literate? Can they easily read and respond? | CATI (Computer Assisted Telephone Interviewing) makes field work faster, easier, more accurate, and skips the data entry stage. | Visual aids possible: pictures, show-cards with responses printed on them for respondents to hold. |
| May make it easier to answer sensitive questions. | May make it easier to answer sensitive questions. | You can use more open-ended questions with interviewers. | You can use more open-ended questions with interviewers. |
| Respondents can look up records. | Adminstrator can clarify problems, help with survey directions. | Proliferation of machines (answering, fax, etc.) increases contact problems. | Respondents LIKE in-person surveys the best. |
| Average response rate for one-wave is 20 percent. Awful! | Makes a larger case base possible; this helps with later analyses. | Increased use of mobile phones as the only phone increases sampling problems. | Interview can be longer than telephone or self-administered survey. |
Internet surveys are proliferating. Currently, over 50 percent of the United State population is "online." This is NOT randomly distributed. While narrowing, the "digital divide" still exists. Wealthy agencies, such as Stanford, can afford to give respondents selected in other ways "WEB-TV" so that the whole sample can respond (if the slowness doesn't drive them crazy). Web surveys clearly work better with highly literate and motivated respondents. Thus, they become similar to other self-administered questionnaires. Build in safeguards so that respondents can only answer the survey once. Also remember that YOU should choose the respondents. If you "advertise" and take whoever answers, there's not a whole lot of difference between your survey and dialing in to one of Entertainment Tonight's 900 numbers. Both are self-selected samples.
Presently, WEB surveys appear to work
best with subsamples of the population who are already online, who like
the topic, and with whom the researchers generally stay in touch (e.g.,
a class, a club).
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Doing a telephone survey? It's tough to keep respondents on the phone for more than 20 minutes. You will have more luck with an in-person survey with long questionnaires.
FOR SOME RULES OF GOOD QUESTION CONSTRUCTION, CLICK HERE! ![]()
FOR A QUESTIONNAIRE EXAMPLE, CLICK HERE!
People dislike writing by hand. This includes people with doctorates. If you have many open-ended questions, use an interviewer. Otherwise your sample response rate will be low and your open-ended item response even lower. Concentrate on closed questions for self-administered surveys.
If you are using a self-administered survey, keep page clutter to a minimum. Use a lot of white space. Don't use complicated charts for people to complete.
MAKE SURE TO PILOT
TEST YOUR QUESTIONNAIRE ALOUD!
Do this even if the questionnaire will
be self-administered.
Pilot test your questionnaire on respondents who are comparable to your selected population on key issues such as education, gender, and ethnicity.
Revise the questionnaire. If needed, do a second pilot test. This is no place to cut corners!
I am out of the University of Michigan Survey Research Center training. Our questionnaires tend to have a more casual, "chatty" feel to them which we believe encourages responses and relaxes respondents.
The very worst example of the University of Michigan style that I have ever heard--which was only partially presented as a joke--went as follows:
"A lot of people think about suicide. How about you? How many times have YOU thought about killing yourself?"OUCH.The idea of introducing the "A lot of people..." is so that the respondent will not feel deviant. This is supposed to help with questions in sensitive areas, such as drinking, illegal drug use, sexuality, birth control, and failing to keep to your diet.
There are several advantages to using interviewers. Interviewers motivate respondents simply by being interested in what respondents have to say. Interviewers can help clarify directions (but NEVER change question wording), can report questions that give problems to the study directors, can probe for more detail.
STEP FIVE: INTERVIEWER SELECTION AND TRAINING
(IF APPROPRIATE)
When was the last time someone asked you what you really thought, cared about what you said, and LISTENED to the answer?
However, as you might guess, a survey that uses interviewers is more expensive. You must also budget time to train interviewers, and interviewers should be periodically monitored to make sure they are doing a good job.
Nearly all professional telephone surveys these days are done via CATI: Computer Assisted Telephone Interviewing. CATI has many improvements over the old paper and pencil questionnaires:
You want interviewers who are:
Have a solid interviewer manual--also read in advance.
Have interviewers practice in teams and practice role-playing respondents.
Have interviewers practice saying in to the mirror (for in-person interviews:) "I'd like to come in and talk with you about this" OR (for telephone interviews:) "The interview will only take about 10 minutes; here's the first question."
MONITOR ALL
INTERVIEWS! Check call on in-person interviews. Spot monitor
on telephone interviews.
THESE STEPS ARE FOR LATER COURSES:
STEP SIX: CODING AND DATA ENTRY
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Not necessary for most CATI programs. Researcher receives diskette or CD with either ASCII data or SPSS format. If data must be manually entered, select
a random sample of cases and re-enter to validate. If large numbers of
errors (over 5 percent) are found, consider checking entire database.
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STEP SEVEN: INDEX CONSTRUCTION (if appropriate)
STEP EIGHT: UNIVARIATE DESCRIPTIVE STATISTICS
STEP NINE: MORE COMPLEX MULTIVARIATE STATISTICS
STEP TEN: REPORT WRITING AND DISSEMINATION
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Susan Carol Losh September
25 2001
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