An introduction to using questionnaires in your Project.
Read these notes and be able to discuss with another student the advantages and disadvantages of using questionnaires generally, and to gather data for your project.
Pie de foto: : "Se poser des questions en regardant plus haut" by Bernard Lamailloux is licensed under CC BY 2.0
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What are questionnaires useful for?
They can gather data efficiently from a large sample.
As the data can be numerical, it is often easy to analyse.
They can be distributed face to face, on paper, or by email / online.
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Questionnaires need to:
Have a clear purpose.
Have enough questions to answer your research questions.
Contain only questions that are relevant to your research questions.
Have options which allow participants to give the answer they want.
Have clear instructions on how to answer each question, perhaps with examples.
Have a logical sequence and group similar questions, so respondents follow your logic.
Not be too long eg 2 pages / 5 minutes to complete
Be anonymous - they must not gather personal data which can identify participants such as their name, date of birth, nationality, or the specific subject that they study.
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The questionnaire aims and purpose
How long it will take to complete
What you will do with the data
Who to contact for more information – this should be your university email address
Clear simple instructions on how to answer the questions
A deadline for completion
A thank-you to the participants for taking the time to complete your questionnaire.
Structured:
Many closed questions
Good for a large sample
Produces numerical data, e.g.: who, where, when, how
Can compare groups, answers
Takes time to write
Writers need to predict all possible answers = difficult
Language must be accurate, clear and unambiguous
Semi-structured and Unstructured
May follow closed questions with open ones
Good in smaller study
Can produce verbal data, e.g.: why, or explanations, personal responses and deeper understanding
May require less rigorous writing
Open questions allow for unexpected answers
Answers / data may be difficult to analyse
Language must be accurate, clear and unambiguous
Different types of questionnaire:
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Use question types that produce the right kind of data to answer your research question, eg: True / False ; Yes / No; Multiple Choice Questions; rank order; numbers; words.
To measure attitudes, Rating Scales or Likert Scales may be useful.
Pie de foto: : https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/54/Likert_Scale.jpg/256px-Likert_Scale.jpg
Questionnaire items
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Respondents only choose answers you provide. If you use open questions, they can write their own answers, but these may be vague and hard to understand. They may also fail to explain their meaning clearly, or provide enough detail.
The wording of questions and answers must be clear and easy to understand, with no ambiguity. Questionnaires must therefore be piloted before use – this writing and testing process requires care and writing skill.
Finally, electronic questionnaires may receive a low number of responses.
Limitations
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Bibliography
Cohen, L., Manion, L., and Morrison, K. (2000). Research Methods in Education. (5th Edition). Routledge. UCL. Public Engagement Evaluation Toolkit: Questionnaires. Available from: https://www.ucl.ac.uk/public-engagement/documents/evaluationtoolkits/evaluationmethods/Questionnaire Accessed 10.4.16Open University. Skills for OU Study: Using a questionnaire. Available from: http://www2.open.ac.uk/students/skillsforstudy/using-a-questionnaire.php Accessed 10.4.16