1 / 7

Rating Scale Research

Rating Scale Research. Aoife Kilduff. Rating Scale Usage – 6 point Scale.

travis
Télécharger la présentation

Rating Scale Research

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. Rating Scale Research Aoife Kilduff

  2. Rating Scale Usage – 6 point Scale • Both Frequency and Development scale rating usage are very similar. In these scales the 4th and 5th rating are the most common. The average standard deviation is approximately 1 and there is a bias for positive rating with 84% of ratings being 3 or over. • The agreement scale is very different. In this scale the 5th rating is the most common with respondents choosing ‘Strongly Agree’ nearly 50% of the time. The average standard deviation is 0.85 and the bias for positive ratings is very strong with 94% of ratings being 3 or over.

  3. 6 point frequency vs 6 point development scale Both the development and frequency scales differ significantly from the normal distribution. There is only a slight difference in the average skewness of the rating scales and they are both biased towards positive ratings with 84% of ratings being 3 or more. However the frequency scale received a negative kurtosis value which suggests that the distribution is flatter than normal. On the other hand the development scale displayed a positive kurtosis value which suggests a distribution which is more peaked than normal. This suggests that in the frequency scale the scores are more spread out.

  4. 6 point frequency scale: Labels vs No Labels 6 point frequency rating scales with only end labels are more negatively skewed than scales with all labels present. End label scales display even more of a bias for positive ratings with 87% of ratings being 3 or over compared to 84% on normal 6 point frequency scales. Research also suggests that fully labelled scales are more effective as they ensure that respondents understand the meaning of each point on the scale.

  5. Rating Scale Usage – 5 point Scale • For all 5 point scales, there is a bias for the 4th rating. This bias is significantly more pronounced in the agreement scale where 50% of ratings are ‘Agree’. • Although all the scales are negatively skewed, the development scale is the least so with only 59% of ratings being on the positive end of the scale (4 and 5). • The frequency rating scale distribution is very negatively skewed with only 6% of ratings being on the negative end of the scale (1 and 2).

  6. Rating Scale Usage – 4 point Scale • Again we see that both development and frequency rating scale usage is similar. In these scales the mode is 3 and there is a bias for positive ratings with around 80% of ratings being 3 or over. • However in the agreement scale there is a significant bias for the 4th rating “Strongly Agree” with over 50% of the ratings falling in this category. • The agreement scale is also significantly negatively skewed with over 95% of ratings being 3 or over.

  7. Which Scale is the best? 2 3 1 • N.B. There is no right or wrong scale to use. What works best depends on the purpose of the survey and the types of items included.

More Related