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Data Collection

Data Collection. Sabrina 9810002M Zooey 9810003M. I. The use of data. To know what certain people are thinking or doing by asking them or observing them. Quantitative data collection: Use questionnaires to show numbers .

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Data Collection

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  1. Data Collection Sabrina 9810002M Zooey 9810003M

  2. I. The use of data • To know what certain people are thinking or doing by asking them or observing them. • Quantitative data collection: Use questionnaires to show numbers . • Qualitative data collection: Use personal interview to show detail information.

  3. II. The focus of enquiry • Primary data: Data researchers collect by themselves is to serve researchers’ specific purpose. • Secondary data: Data collected by others comes from a variety of sources. • The group of interest is defined as the population. • A sample is a selection from the population of interest. • More different population larger sample

  4. III. Asking questions • A questionnaire is a tool used to ask questions which is in a variety of ways, like email, postal and telephone surveys and structured and semi-structured interviews. • Structured interview = closed questions = answer predetermined items. • Semi-structured interview = open-ended questions = answer in own words.

  5. Questions Open Closed Classifica -tional Lists Ranking Scale

  6. Classificational questions: The inquirer may be interested in gender, age, marital status and occupation (personal information). Ex: Age last birthday? □ Under 18 □ 18-25 □ 26-30 □ 31-40 □ 41-50

  7. List questions: To ask the participant to select one or more from a given list of alternatives. Ex: Which are your favorite games in class? □ Simon Says □ Mime □ Dodge ball □ Car Racing □ Snake

  8. Ranking questions: To ask a respondent to give an order or preference. Ex: Rank the following factors in order of level when deciding the source of pressure. (from 5 the highest to 1 the lowest) □ peer pressure □ exams □ parents’ expectation □ pressure from teacher □ homework

  9. Scale (rating) questions: To determine the strength of views or opinions. Ex: How likely do you like (agree) to play games? □ Very likely (Agree strongly) 5 □ Quite likely (Agree slightly) 4 □ Neither likely (Agree) nor unlikely (Disagree) 3 □ Quite unlikely (Disagree slightly) 2 □ Very unlikely (Disagree strongly) 1

  10. IV. Framing questions • Avoid bias and leading questions. Ex: “ Would you agree that…” • Avoid jargon or shorthand. Ex: “Would you like to use CALL…” • Avoid ambiguous words. Ex: usually, recently, frequently…

  11. Keep questions short and simple. Avoid long questions. Ex: “Given the recent change in price and the fall in demand usually experienced at this time of year, do you think a 20 pence promotional voucher would…” • Avoid questions with negatives. Ex: “ Do you never…”

  12. Avoid hypothetical questions. Ex: “ If you were a millionaire, would you…” • Use filters to avoid irrelevant questions. Ex: “ If a smoker jump to question 3…” • Make it easy for respondent to answer the questions. Ex: “ What did you buy in the last week?” ※ In general it’s easier to use or improve existing questions.

  13. V. Qualitative Data Collection: Collect data by interviewing and conducted individually or in a group. • 1. Focus group interviews: Fewer than 10 questions • 2. Open-ended questions: Allow more self-reflections • 3. Avoid using “why” questions: Use “how come” or “ what” • 4. Carefully develop the questions by doing pilot testing

  14. 5. Provide enough information for understanding • 6. Arrange questions from general to specific • 7. Listen more, talk less, and ask ”real questions” (the interviewer doesn’t already know or anticipate the response) • 8. Try to get “ inner voice” instead of “ superficial” information • 9. Take notes and bring tape-recording: Easy to transcribe

  15. 10. Ask questions when you do not understand: Ask for examples or concrete details • 11. Explore laughter, pauses, facial expressions • 12. Ask participants to tell a story: To get a complete picture (transcription mode1 and model 2) • 13. Follow your instincts : Try to feel participants’ feelings

  16. VI. Benefits of using a questionnaire in interviewing: • A. To ensure covering all of the questions • B. Can explore more in- depth information within each of the questions • C. Collect both quantitative and qualitative data altogether

  17. Thanks for your attention!

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