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Writing Good Questions

Writing Good Questions. A QUESTIONNAIRE IS ONLY AS GOOD AS THE QUESTIONS IT ASKS. Plan What to Measure. What information is required? Who are appropriate target respondents? What data collection method will be used to survey respondents?. Preface: Open-ended versus Close-ended Questions.

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Writing Good Questions

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  1. Writing Good Questions Dr. Michael R. Hyman, NMSU

  2. A QUESTIONNAIRE IS ONLY AS GOOD AS THE QUESTIONS IT ASKS

  3. Plan What to Measure • What information is required? • Who are appropriate target respondents? • What data collection method will be used to survey respondents?

  4. Preface: Open-ended versus Close-ended Questions

  5. Communication skills of respondent less critical Speedy response Easier to answer Data quickly coded & entered Easier to analyze Less-skilled or no interviewer needed Can’t obtain in-depth response Poor at providing new insights Harder to write Answer may not fully reflect respondent’s attitude Categories hint at right answers Close-ended Questions AdvantagesDisadvantages

  6. Wide range of responses Encourages response Good for probing Biased by respondent articulateness Interviewer bias Hard to record answers Coding inconsistency Hard/costly to code Reduced cross-study comparability Tabulating complexity Costly Open-ended Questions AdvantagesDisadvantages

  7. Guidelines for Writing Good Questions

  8. Be Clear and Precise

  9. Responses Should Be Mutually Exclusive and Exhaustive

  10. Use Natural and Familiar Language

  11. Use Natural and Familiar Language • Grinder • Hoagie • Hero • Submarine • Poor Boy

  12. Avoid Leading Questions

  13. Avoid Leading Questions Leading version: 1. Do you believe that private citizens have the right to own firearms to defend themselves, their families, and property from violent criminal attack? Yes No Undecided Improved version: 2. Do you believe that a ban on the private ownership of firearms would be significantly reduce the number of murders and robberies in your community? Yes No Undecided

  14. Avoid Double-barreled Questions

  15. Avoid Double-barreled Questions

  16. Ask One Question at a Time

  17. State Alternatives Explicitly

  18. Questions Should Yield Reliable and Valid Answers • Relevance • Memory • Omission • Telescoping • Creation

  19. Provide Appropriate Time Referents

  20. Example of Order Bias

  21. Sources of Order Effects in Self-administered Questionnaires

  22. Other Guidelines

  23. Procedures for Softening Impact of Potentially Objectionable Questions

  24. Asking Sensitive Question • Respondent randomly selects which of two questions—one innocuous and one sensitive—to answer Questions: Last digit of SS# odd? Sensitive question? n=1000 If 300 ‘yes’ answers, then 50 of 500 (10%) answered ‘yes’ to sensitive question

  25. Poor Questions

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