reliability is a measure of consistency. If a particular measurement is repeated and the same result is obtained then that measurement is described as being reliable
the 2 ways of assessing reliability are:
test-retest
inter-observer
test-retest is the sametest or questionnaire is given to the sameperson on 2 or more differentoccasions. If the test of questionnaire is reliable the resultsshould be the same (or verysimilar) each time it is administered
inter-observer is in an observation,2 or more observerscompare their data by conducting a pilot study (a small-scaletrial run of the observation to check that observers are applying behavioural categories in the same way). Observers should watch the sameevent or the sequence of events but record their dataseparately
the 4 ways of improving reliability are:
questionnaires
observations
experiments
interviews
a questionnaire can improve reliability by replacing the number of openquestions with closed questions
interviews improve reliability by using the sameinterviewer each time. If this isn't possible,all interviewers must be trained like so so they avoid questions that are leading or ambiguous
observations improve reliability by making sure that allbehaviouralcategories are operationalised and measurable.Categoriesshouldn'toverlap and all possible behaviours should be included. If categories are overlapping or absent,differentobservers have to use their ownjudgement in deciding what to record and where
experiments improve reliability by making sure that the procedures are the same every time. This is so that performance of differentparticitpants can be compared