self report techniques + design

    Cards (16)

    • self report techniques:
      • questionnaires
      • interviews
    • self report:
      • any method in which person is asked to state or explain feelings or behaviour related to given topic
    • open questions:
      • no fixed responses
      • produce qualitative data (detailed, difficult to analyse)
    • closed questions:
      • fixed number of responses
      • produce quantitative data (easy to analyse, less detail)
    • questionnaires strengths:
      • cost effective - large sample, easy, quick, cheap
      • doesnt need to be present to complete (decreases influence of interpersonal factors)
      • data is straightforward to analyse
    • questionnaires weaknesses:
      • social desirability bias (presents themselves more favourably) - threatens internal validity of data
      • response bias - respond in a similar way e.g always ticking yes
    • interviews:
      • live encounter where interviewer asks questions to assess thoughts/experiences
    • structured interviews:
      • pre determined set of questions in a fixed order
    • unstructured interviews:
      • conversation like, no set questions
      • general aim = discuss a certain topic
      • interviewer is encourage to expand + elaborate
    • semi- structured interviews:
      • set of questions + also free to ask follow up questions when appropriate
    • interview strengths:
      • detailed qualitative data
      • structured interviews easy to replicate - standard format
      • unstructured - provide more flexibility, can follow up on points
    • interview weaknesses:
      • analysis can be difficult, time consuming
      • social desirability bias
      • interviewer bias
      • structured = no opportunities for deviation
    • types of closed questions (questionnaire design):
      • likert scales - indicates agreement with statement
      • rating scales - identify a value that represents feeling about topic
      • fixed choice -required to indicate from a list of options that apply to them
    • designing interviews:
      • creates interview schedule - should be standardised, decreases effect of interviewer bias
      • notes or record interview, group interviews may be appropriate
      • quiet room + neutral questions to start with
      • remind participant that responses = confidential
    • good questions:
      • questions should be piloted
      • participants can misinterpret/be confused - negative impact on quality of info
    • common errors of questions:
      • overuse of jargon - avoid unfamiliar technical terms
      • emotive questions + leading questions - neutral language, leading questions may elicit false info
      • double barrelled + double negatives: issue if participant agrees to 1 question but not other, double negatives difficult to decipher
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