Self-report

Cards (18)

  • Quantitative data - Numerical data often collected in experiments
  • Qualitative data - non-numerical data often collected in self-report methods
  • Quantitative data A03: STRENGTH
    I: easy to analyse + compare
    E: Use of numbers provides neat conclusions that can be statistically analysed
    C: high internal validity as there is less subjective interpretation + higher chance they are measuring what they intend to measure
  • Quantitative data A03: WEAKNESS
    I: lacks rich detail
    E: the data is not as informative as qualitative data
    C: may not give you the complete picture of what you're trying to measure
  • Qualitative data A03: STRENGTH
    I: More detailed and in-depth data
    E: allows the researcher to ask the participant 'why' which makes the data more informative than using statistics
    C: greater understanding of human thoughts and behaviour
  • Qualitative data A03: WEAKNESS
    I: difficult to analyse + compare
    E: because it is non-numerical it is difficult to make comparisons between the words as using numbers to compare is much more objective
    C: very subjective analysis and simple conclusions cannot be made easily which makes it harder to establish cause and effect
  • Questionnaires: self report technique
    To investigate their views, opinions and attitudes
    Large and representative sample
  • Open questions:
    Allow participants to write their own response which produces qualitative data
  • Closed questions:
    Give participants a limited number of fixed responses which produces quantitative data
  • Questionnaires A03: STRENGTH
    I: time + money efficient
    E: Can be mass-produced and analysed easily particularly when its quantitative data
    C: enables researcher to distribute them quickly to many participants meaning conclusions are more representative
  • Questionnaires A03: WEAKNESS
    I: lack rich detail
    E: often made up of closed, fixed-response questions, which doesn't tell us why people think or feel a certain way
    C: Means we do not get a full accurate picture of the respondents true feelings - lowers the validity - cannot establish a cause and effect
  • Questionnaires A03: WEAKNESS
    I: social desirability bias
    E: People may change their answers to be more desirable
    C: low internal validity as its not measuring what it intends to measure therefore cannot establish a cause and effect relationship
  • Interviews:
    • Natural and flexible approach
    • Structured, unstructured or semi-structured
    • Closed/open questions
  • Structured interview:
    • Prewritten
    • sometimes add follow-on questions and can be closed or open questions
  • Unstructured interview:
    • few predetermined questions
    • more like a conversation
    • tend to be open questions
  • Interviews A03: STRENGTH
    I: detailed information
    E: Use combination of both closed and open questions - allows the participants to be honest and express themselves + allow the researcher to analyse the responses using graphs
    C: accurately measuring the participants response in much greater detail - higher internal validity
  • Interviews A03: WEAKNESS
    I: time consuming to conduct
    E: interviews will require more transcribing which can take many hours in comparison to collecting quantitative data
    C: means the sample size is going to be small so the sample is less generalisable
  • Interviews A03: WEAKNESS
    I: time consuming to analyse
    E: more difficult to statistically analyse the data from unstructured interviews as it tends to be qualitative data which requires subjective interpretation from the researcher
    C: less trustworthy as one person interpretated the data which means errors could be made leading to biases and opinions which = low validity