Advantages of open questions
respondents can answer in their own terms
allows unusual answers
allows tapping into participant’s knowledge
good for exploring new areas
disadvantages of open questions
time consuming to record/code
length may put respondents off
inaccuracies in transcription of spoken answers
coding, and the types of coding
deriving themes/categories of behaviour. researcher usually assigns number to code
allows information to be coded quantitatively
–> pre coding and post coding
post coding
going back to info to look for incidences of theme or category, may be unreliable because of inconsistencies in judgement from different coders
pre coding
when researcher designs coding grame before administering the survey
3 basic principles of coding
categories are mutually exclusive
categories are exhaustive (including “other”)
clear rules regarding how codes are applied (ensuring consistency)
advantages of closed questions
easy to process easy to compare set of answers help clarify the meaning of the question quick and easy to complete reduces risk of bias from recorder
disadvantages of closed questions
answers lack authenticity/spontaneity
care needs to be taken to prevent overlap in categories
difficult to make answers exhaustive
irritates respondents when answer categories aren’t relatable
reduces conversation/rapport in interviews
types of questions
general rules for designing questions
what does it mean to avoid ambiguity?
- clarify words that mean different things to different people (ex: dinner)
what does it mean to avoid long questions?
-long questions may be nice for questions asking about behaviour, the longer they take to answer, the more it may facilitate memory recall
what does it mean to avoid double-barrelled questions?
ex: how frequently do you cook and clean? respondent may cook but never clean
what does it mean to avoid general questions?
.
what does it mean to avoid leading questions?
.
what does it mean to avoid questions that ask several questions
ex: who did you vote for in the 2011 federal election? should be did you vote in the 2011 federal election? if yes, which party did you vote for?
what does it mean to avoid negatives?
confusion can lead to innaccurate answers
what does it mean to minimize technical values?
.
what does it mean to ensure respondents have requisite knowledge?
-if respondents do not know about topic, answers won’t be meaningful
what does it mean to ensure symmetry between question and answer set?
ex: do you believe in God? strongly agree, agree, disagree, strongly disagree
what does it mean to ensure answer set is balanced?
equal number of positive responses to negative responses
what does it mean to not overstretch people’s memories?
ex: how many times do you drink in a year? vs how many times do you drink in a week?
what does it mean to provide “don’t know” options?
what does it mean to consider question order?