Questionnaires
Designing a questionnaire means
creating valid and
reliable questions that address
your research objectives, placing them in a useful order, and selecting an
appropriate method for administration.
Questionnaires
can be self-administered or researcher-administered. Self-administered questionnaires are
more common because they are easy to implement and inexpensive, but
researcher-administered questionnaires allow deeper insights.
Types of Questionnaire
Types of Questionnaires are as follows:
Open-ended Questionnaire
An open-ended questionnaire allows the respondent to answer
the question in their own words, without any pre-determined response options.
The questions usually start with phrases like “how,” “why,” or “what,” and
encourage the respondent to provide more detailed and personalized answers.
Close-ended Questionnaire
In a closed-ended questionnaire, the respondent is given a
set of predetermined response options to choose from. This type of
questionnaire is easier to analyze and summarize, but may not provide as much
insight into the respondent’s opinions or attitudes.
Mixed Questionnaire
A mixed questionnaire is a combination of open-ended and
closed-ended questions. This type of questionnaire allows for more flexibility
in terms of the questions that can be asked, and can provide both quantitative
and qualitative data.
You
can organize the questions logically, with a clear progression from simple to
complex. Alternatively, you can randomize the question order between
respondents.
Logical
flow
Using
a logical flow to your question order means starting with simple questions,
such as behavioral or opinion questions, and ending with more complex,
sensitive, or controversial questions.
The
question order that you use can significantly affect the responses by priming
them in specific directions. Question order effects, or context effects, occur
when earlier questions influence the responses to later questions, reducing the
validity of your questionnaire.
Once you’ve specified your research aims, you can operationalize your variables of interest into questionnaire items.
Operationalizing concepts means turning them from abstract ideas into concrete
measurements. Every question needs to address a defined need and have a clear
purpose.
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