1 / 21

Research Skills

Research Skills. Week 3: Designing a questionnaire. Last Week. Decided on a subject area Performed a literature search Started to think about your research question and hypotheses This week: Designing a questionnaire to test your hypotheses. Today. Sampling Consent Question types

Télécharger la présentation

Research Skills

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Research Skills Week 3: Designing a questionnaire

  2. Last Week • Decided on a subject area • Performed a literature search • Started to think about your research question and hypotheses • This week: Designing a questionnaire to test your hypotheses.

  3. Today • Sampling • Consent • Question types • Answer types • Questionnaire design • Coding

  4. Sampling • Who to ask: your target population • How many people: 20 (5 per group member) • Avoid a biased sample, e.g. if asking about drinking behaviour in men and women: • Don’t just ask women • Don’t just ask people in a bar • Don’t just ask tee-totallers

  5. Consent • You must adhere to a strict code of ethics in your research: http://www.bps.org.uk/the-society/code-of-conduct/ • Participants must: • give consent to take part • not be coerced into participating • be free to withdraw at any time • Administering your questionnaires already has ethics approval.

  6. Question Types: Open-Ended • Participants create their own answers • “What is your age?” • “Are you a smoker?” • “What are your favourite TV programmes?” • “How much do you like biscuits?” • To make data analysis easier DO NOT use open-ended questions that allow participants to write long responses

  7. Question Types: Closed-Format • Experimenter provides participants with options • Choice of category:- Are you a smoker? Never smoked / Current smoker / Ex-smoker • Likert scale: - How strongly do you agree with the statement “I like biscuits” 1 2 3 4 5 Strongly Disagree Disagree Neutral Agree Strongly Agree • Checklists: Circle the TV programmes that you watch • Rating scales: How much do you like this drink, on a scale of 1-10? • Ranking: Order these sports in terms of how much you like them

  8. Advantages and Disadvantages • Open-Ended • Exploratory • Useful when you can’t cover all the possible answers • Impractical in terms of analysis • Closed-Format • Easy and quick to fill in • Doesn’t matter how literate or articulate you are • Easy to code, record, and analyse results quantitatively • Easy to report results

  9. Answer Types: Continuous Data • If the answer to the question is a number that represents an amount, e.g. • IQ score • Height • How long it takes to complete a jigsaw puzzle • Likert scale responses • Ranks • Top tip: Calculating a mean makes sense with continuous data (but not with categorical data)

  10. Examples of Continuous Data • Please give an approximation of the number of alcoholic drinks you normally consume on a Saturday night: … Drinks. • Please indicate your agreement with the following statement: • I feel that I should drink less on a Saturday night □ □ □ □ □ 1 2 3 4 5 Strongly Disagree Neutral Agree Strongly Disagree Agree

  11. Answer Types: Categorical Data • If the answer to the question is: • a word • “Yes” • a sentence • “I think that biscuits are tasty” • a description • “Physics student” • a code that represents a category • 1 = undergraduate, 2 = postgraduate • NB: Numerical codes can be used to represent categorical responses BUT this does not transform categorical data into continuous data.

  12. ExamplesCategorical Data • In which town were you born? ……. • Please indicate your gender: □ Male □ Female • Which actor is the hunkiest? □ Brad Pitt □ Johnny Depp □ Orlando Bloom

  13. Examples of Tricky Bits of Data • “Please indicate your age:” • Continuous: … Years • Categorical : □ 18-25 □ 26-30 □ 31–35 □ 36–40 etc. • Categorical : ... Years □ Older than 60 Years • “How many days a week do you usually exercise?” • Continuous : … days • Continuous : □ 1 day □ 2 days □ 3 days □ 4 days □ 5 days □ 6 days □ 7 days • Categorical : □ 1 day □ 2 days □ 3 days □ 4 days □ 5 days or more • This can be applied to a number of data

  14. Questionnaire Design • Keep it short and simple • Start with an introduction/ welcome message • Allow not applicable responses to all possibly relevant questions • Say thank you to your participants

  15. Questionnaire Design • Go from general to particular • Go from easy to difficult • Go from factual to abstract • Do not start with demographic and personal questions (put these at the end)

  16. Questionnaire Design • Start with a title • Assure anonymity • Assign each questionnaire a number instead of asking for names • Avoid personal and sensitive questions • Be aware that you may bias answers simply by being there • Try to avoid biased wording • e.g. “Would you agree that the death penalty is a bad idea?”

  17. Coding • Giving numbers to categories in categorical data is called coding • e.g. “Yes” becomes 1 and “No” becomes 2 • Codes can be allocated either before the question is answered (pre-coding) or afterwards (post-coding) • You should agree on codes with the rest of your group before you enter any data • We will come back to this in Week 5

  18. Plan of action • Think about your sample • Create your questionnaire • Pre-test the questionnaire (if practical) • Conduct interviews • Enter data • Analyse the data • Write your research proposal • Write your lab report

  19. Hypotheses • 2 Categorical Hypotheses: - • Should be tested with 2 categoricalquestions • e.g. “Men prefer to buy fast food at Burger King, while women prefer to buy fast food at McDonalds” • 2 Continuous Hypotheses: - • Should be tested with a categoricalquestion and a continuousquestion • e.g. “Males consume a larger quantity of alcoholic beverages per week than females”

  20. By the time you leave class • Put together your group questionnaire • 10 questions in total • 5 Categorical questions • 5 Continuous questions • Try to consider your hypotheses while creating the questions • Get a tutor to check it over

  21. By next week • Try to have asked 20 people to fill out your questionnaire • Top tip: If psychology students are a suitable sample, swap questionnaires with each other

More Related