self-report techniques

    Cards (20)

    • what are the 2 self-report techniques
      1. questionnaires
      2. interviews
    • questionnaires
      a set of written questions designed to collect information that participants fill in themselves
    • interviews
      a set of questions is asked by an interviewer to an interviewee to assess their thoughts or experiences. Interviews can either be structured or unstructured.
    • questionnaires may either contain closed or open questions
    • closed questions
      questions where there are fixed choices of responses. They generate quantitative data.
    • strength of close questions
      provide easy to analyse data which makes it easy to compare with other data.
    • limitation of closed questions
      they lack depth and detail and can be limiting in allowance for response – participants may be forced to choose answers that don’t represent their true thoughts.
    • open questions
      questions where there is no fixed response and participants can give any answer they like. They generate qualitative data.
    • strength of open questions
      provide rich in depth and detail responses and are useful for sensitive topics as participants can elaborate on their answers
    • limitation of open questions
      they are difficult to convert to statistical data and more difficult to analyse.
    • construction of questionnaires
      ·       Clarity – the questions should be phrased in a way that avoids ambiguity and is clear to the respondent
      ·       Bias – avoid leading questions and try to reduce social desirability bias
      ·       Analysis – closed questions give easier to analyse data but responders may be forced to select answers that don’t represent their true thoughts. Open questions are more revealing but difficult to analyse.
    • strengths of questionnaires
      ·       Cost-effective
      ·       Gathers large amounts of data quickly
      ·       Easy to analyse
      ·       Responses can be anonymous meaning participants are more likely to be open and reveal personal information
    • limitations of questionnaires
      ·       Takes a long time to design
      ·       Less detail than interviews with limited answers.
      ·       Sample bias
    • structured interviews
      The questions are fixed in structured interviews – the interview reads out a set of predetermined questions and records the response.
    • strength of structured interviews
      they can be standardised and easily replicable. Also, comparisons can be made between participants easily due to standardisation. It is easy to analyse
    • limitation of structured interviews
      interviewer bias can be presented through aspects such as body language, listening skills and interpreter bias. Also, the interviewer must stick to the pre-determined questions and there is a lack of flexibility.
    • unstructured interviews
      Unstructured interviews have no fixed questions, just general aims. It is more like a conversation.
    • strength of unstructured interviews
      more qualitative data and detailed information is collected. The interviewer will receive more information that is not predetermined by questions.
    • limitation of unstructured interviews
      the analysis of data is difficult. Also, the interviewer needs to be trained and skilled.
    • construction and design of interviews
      ·       Recording information – can be done by writing down answers, using a video recorder or audio recorder
      ·       Ethical issues – informed consent is needed from the participant for the researcher to obtain and keep the data.
      ·       Location – a quiet room away from other people is the most appropriate as this location is likely to get the participant to feel comfortable and open up
      ·       Neutral questions – usually started with to make the participant feel relaxed and help establish a rapport.