Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Questionnaires
- Theoretical
- Advantages
- Positivists favour
questionnaires due to
reliability,
generalizability &
representativeness,
- Standardised questions &
answers produce reliable
data- other researchers can
replicate questionnaire.
- Pre-coded responses allow us to
produce quantitative data, identify
and measure behaviour patterns &
establish cause & effect
relationships.
- Questionnaires are often
large scale, thus more
representative.
- allow us to make accurate
generalisations about the wider
population.
- Questionnaires allow comparisons to be
made, both over time & between different
societies.
- Useful for testing hypothesises about
cause & effect relationships between
different variables.
- Maintain detachment & objectivity-
sociologists personal involvement with
their respondents is kept to a minimum.
- Disadvantages
- Interpretivists reject the use of
questionnaires- impose the
researcher's framework of ideas
on respondents & fail to give us a
wider picture.
- low in validity
- Researcher cant be sure whether s
returned questionnaire was actually
completed by the person to whom it was
addressed.
- low response rate- very few bother to
complete it and return it
- high response rate can be
obtained if questionnaires are
collected by hand or if follow-up
questions are sent BUT this adds
to time & cost
- those who return their
questionnaires may be
different from those who
don't.
- eg. those with strong views on a subject
are more likely to respond than those
who have little knowledge or interest in it.
- If the respondent are different to the
non-respondents = will produce
distorted & unrepresentative results so
no accurate generalisations can be
made.
- Lack flexibility-
researcher is
stuck with
questions they
decided to ask
so cant explore
new areas of
interest.
- lack of contact = inability to
clarify what the questions
mean to the respondent or to
deal with misunderstandings.
- Social desirability effect- don't want
to reveal the complete truth
- interpretivists: questionnaires are
more likely to impose the
researchers own meanings than
to reveal those of the
respondent. (page 189)
- Ethical
- Advantages
- few ethical problems than
most other research
methods.
- Respondents are under no
obligation to answer sensitive
questions.
- Disadvantages
- Questionnaires may ask intrusive or
sensitive questions.
- researcher needs to gain informed
consent & guarantee respondent's
anonymity.
- Practical
- Advanatages
- not money and time
consuming
- postal
questionnaires-
easy and cheap
to gather large
quantities of data
from large
numbers of
people.
- eg. Helen Connor
& Sara Dewson
(2001) posted
nearly 4000
questinnaires to
students at 14
higher education
institutions around
the country.
- no need to recruit &
train interviewers or
observers to collect
the data.
- Data easy to quantity,
where pre-coded,
close-ended questions
are used & can be easily
processed by computer.
- Disadvantages
- data tends to be limited & superficial as
they need to be fairly brief.
- Respondents are unlikely to complete a
long, time-consuming questionnaire.
- Researcher cant be sure whether the
potential respondent has actually received
the questionnaire.