Questionnaires - standardised set of questions is given to each ppt, they give their written answers.
Questionnaires
gives you lots of data quickly
provides with an insight into people's views, opinions, past and specific experiences
BUT ONLY IS PPT ANSWERS ACCURATELY (tend to lie due to social desirability)
Social desirability - tendency for people to present themselves in a generally favourable way. Particularly within the field of self-report assessment of personality and attitudes.
Qualitative data: rich in detail and description, textual or narrative form
allows in-depth analysis
difficult to analyse or compare
Quantitative data: numerical data, measurements of quantity or amount
easier to analyse, to compare
not detailed, potentially superficial
Open questions: allow ppt to answer however they want
Generate qualitative data
Closed questions: restrict respondent to a predetermined set of responses
Generate quantitative data
Likert scale - scale from 1 to 10, usually used in closed questions
Questionnaires +
large amount of info from them can be administered quickly, it is cost-efficient and less time consuming
easy to reach a wide range of ppt from target population
easily made anonymous, done in private, more honest and valid responses
Questionnaire -
response rates are low, hard to accurately generalise
response bias -only certain types of people will return the questionnaire
lack of monitoring responses means respondents may be less honest, so the data is not valid
ppt may misunderstand the questions -> invalid data
acquiescence bias - is the tendency for survey respondents to agree with research statements, without the action being a true reflection of their own position or the question itself
Reliability - doing the same test in the same way and getting the same (similar) results
Self-reporting techniques:
questionnaire
interview
Structured interview - usually produces quantitative data, where questions are decided in advance, researcher determines the focus
Unstructured interview - questions not decided in advance, it allows focus to be decided during the session
Semi-structured - most successful, with only some questions decided in advance, interviewer can elaborate on pp's answers.
AO3 Interviews:
Sensitive Topics - certain aspects of behaviour may be personal (or sensitive), therefore best ‘tackled’ by this approach. Respondents may be more open face to face (or not!)
Flexibility - The interviewer can investigate complex issues, which may be difficult to study via experiments. The interviewer can pursue an interesting line of questioning and get more qualitative data
AO3 Interviews:
Responses - depending on the type of interview, the responses of the interviewee may be restricted. Some respondents may be inhibited or dislike the interviewer/situation
Misinterpretation & Bias - to be completely objective, the interviewer needs to be detached from the interviewee - difficult to achieve. Data collected can be difficult to analyze (unstructured and qualitative)
How to check validity?
Assess whether your questionnaire has face validity (does it look like it is measuring what it is supposed to measure?)
Does it have content validity (are all the questions relevant and helping to measure the target variables)
Does it have concurrent validity? (Do you think your findings would agree with another method (e.g an observation)?)
Correlation - is a statistical study that shows whether and how strongly a pair of variables are related.
The numbers being analysed relate to behaviours (or variables that could affect them)
Each of the two sets of numbers represents a co-variable. Once data has been collected for each of the co-variables, it can be plotted in a scattergram and/ or statistically analysed to produce a correlation coefficient.
Positive correlation - both variables increase
Negative correlation - one variable increases, the other decreases
Zero correlation - chaotic
Non-linear correlation - curvilinear
Scattergrams and coefficients indicate the strength of a relationship between two variables, which highlights the extent to which two variables correspond.
always coefficient of between 1 and -1 (closer to 1 - more positive)
Significance of coefficient:
Significance is the extent to which something is particularly unusual. It is not significant if it happened due to chance.
The more pairs of data we have the smaller the coefficient can be to make it significant.
Strengths of correlation:
Correlations are very useful as a preliminary research technique (identifying link for further research)
Can be used to research topics that are sensitive/ otherwise would be unethical.
Can use secondary data (such as stats)
Quick and economical to produce
Limitations of correlation:
Correlations only identify a link, can't establish cause and effect
might have a third variable present which is influencing one of the co-variables. E.g. stress might lead to smoking/ alcohol intake which leads to illness, so there is an indirect relationship between stress and illness.
Media reports them as fact when actually it may not be real. e.g. Crime rates in children are higher when you come from single parent family
Primary data: data collected for the research purpose
Collected from experiments, self-report, observations
Primary data
+ gets data you need to answer the research question
-time consuming
Secondary data: collected by someone else, could be journal data, government stats, books.
Secondary data
+ inexpensive and easy to access
+ can be used to avoid collection of some primary data