Designing Effective Questionnaires
From ideas to items
Question & response types
Example items
Designing Effective Interviews
From ideas to interviews
Interview schedules
Successful probes & follow-ups
Piloting
In psychology, we often want to measure things we cannot directly observe
Within quantitative methods, measurement refers to the way we record behaviours, feelings, attitudes, & characteristics in a quantifiable sense
We can measure variables like height & weight, but we can also measure 'unquantifiable' constructs like 'happiness' or 'lecture-induced boredom'
We can make attempts to measure these feelings through observation...
But often we rely on our participants' abilities to self-report their behaviours, feelings, attitudes, & characteristics instead
But! We need to make sure that we ask our participants the right questions so that they can self-report accurately... this applies to quant & qual methods!
We most often ask participants to self-report through questionnaires, BUT someone has to create them at some point... (your task for the lab report)
When designing any questionnaire, the first task is identifying and defining what topic(s) we want to be covered in the survey
The aim here is to break down big ideas into smaller concepts that can be measured with specific items in a questionnaire
For our session today, let's say that our topic is 'lecture-induced boredom' 😴
The next step is to brainstorm what thoughts, feelings, behaviours, or characteristics define our construct
We most often ask participants to self-report through questionnaires, BUT someone has to create them at some point... (your task for the lab report)
When designing any questionnaire, the first task is identifying and defining what topic(s) we want to be covered in the survey
The aim here is to break down big ideas into smaller concepts that can be measured with specific items in a questionnaire
For our session today, let's say that our topic is 'lecture-induced boredom' 😴
The next step is to brainstorm what thoughts, feelings, behaviours, or characteristics define our construct
Task! It's Poll Everywhere time! Get your devices out ready!
Top Tip! Picture people at the two extremes of lecture-induced boredom, what do they 'look' like? What do they think/feel? What behaviours do they display?
So now we have an idea of what 'lecture-induced boredom' is, we can design some questions to measure it...
For our next step, we need to decide what type of questions we're going to ask:
Open Questions
Closed Questions
So now we have an idea of what 'lecture-induced boredom' is, we can design some questions to measure it...
For our next step, we need to decide what type of questions we're going to ask:
Open Questions
Closed Questions
Usually 5 or 7 points covering the two extremes with a neutral option in the middle e.g.,
Not very often to very often
Very untrue of me to very true of me
Not at all important to extremely important
Extremely unlikely to extremely likely
Strongly disagree to strongly agree
Never true to always true
Easy Error! The responses must fit with the phrasing of the question or statement! For today, let's go with strongly disagree to strongly agree
Now we've decided on a Likert scale we can come up with our items!
As a starting point, it can be helpful to look at how our construct has been measured previously, or how it's been measured in similar contexts
We can use those examples as inspiration for coming up with our own items (but don't steal!!)
Looking at existing measures can also help us identify what gaps there are in previous work that our questionnaire can fill
Keep in Mind! We want our items to be valid and reliable measures of the specific construct we're interested in! 🎯
I had a go at coming up with my own items in the next few slides...
I used the Boredom Proneness Scale by Farmer & Sunberg (1986) as inspiration...
Using what you already know about questionnaire design, I want you to have a go at telling me what's right or wrong with them...
Task! What do you think? Post on poll everywhere!
Use statements not questions
Make sure your response options fit the wording of the item
Be specific, ask one thing per question
Avoid double-negatives & double-barrelled questions
Use neutral language - don't present one response as being more desirable
Avoid jargon
Consider your sample, are there any factors that might impact their understanding of your items?
Pilot your questionnaire to ensure it makes sense to others
Top Tip! Keep the image of the 'extremes' in mind when creating and refining your own questionnaire items in your practicals!
With qualitative methods we are usually trying to understand someone's personal experiences
We're more concerned with meaning and understanding subjective experiences
There are many different types of qualitative research, and a lot of them involve using interviews as a method of data collection
3 different types of interview:
Could involve individuals OR groups
Be Aware! Both quantitative and qualitative methods are subjective, but we'll learn more about that through this module! 😁
The process of coming up with questions for interviews is quite similar to questionnaires...
You firstly need to identify the research topic or area of interest
For unstructured interviews the research topic can be relatively general, for structured interviews it needs to be more focused
For more structured interviews, you would then create an interview schedule (or an interview guide) that contains the questions you plan to ask all of your participant(s)
To help you come up with questions, think about what type of information you would like to obtain: opinions, attitudes, knowledge, beliefs, behaviours, sensory, experiences, feelings, demographics...
Create a bank of questions that cover each of these domains for your research topic, focusing on the past, the present, and the future
Aim for open questions that elicit story-telling - remember the goal is to understand your participants' experiences in depth
Test them out - think about how you might answer them yourself/go through the questions with a friend
If we were interested in R anxiety what interview questions could we ask?
Keep in mind!! We want to know attitudes, knowledge, beliefs, behaviours, experiences, feelings, demographics etc, in the past, present, & future
Sometimes you might need to ask questions that are not in your interview schedule
Participants could offer up interesting points that you hadn't originally considered when creating your interview schedule, but now want to explore further
Or it could be that your participant isn't very forthcoming, or something they've said is inconsistent/unclear
In these cases, you can sway from the interview schedule to probe or follow-up on prior responses
Avoid directly asking 'why?' - it can come off as confrontational, instead, try using 'how'
Pay attention to your participant and actively listen
When you create your interview schedule, include some answer-based paths to take to help you prepare follow-ups and probes in advance
Be flexible when creating your interview schedule, sometimes things you don't anticipate might come up
Top Tip! Be comfortable with silence and your participant will want to fill it! Give them space and time to think!
It's easier to clarify what you mean by a question during an interview because you're present and involved in the process (vs a questionnaire...)
But it's much better to avoid any misunderstanding from the start - participants may feel uncomfortable asking for clarity
You should pilot your interview questions (and questionnaires too) before recruiting participants for the main study
Some questions might turn out to be easily misunderstood or actually irrelevant to the research question
After piloting, you can revise any problematic questions to be more effective
Keep in Mind! The process of designing a questionnaire or an interview schedule is very reflective & iterative! It requires testing & 'thinking time' 💭
Ask one question at a time, avoiding questions that elicit short answers
It's important to build rapport so start with simple questions to ease your participant into the interview
When moving between topics, tell your participant and give them the opportunity to add anything before you go onto the next question
Keep difficult or potentially sensitive questions towards the end of the interview (when you both feel more comfortable with the interview process)
Close the interview with an opportunity for participants to add any more information ("is there anything else you’d like to add before we end?")
Tailor the language and pace of the interview to your sample
We heavily rely on self-report measures in psychology, and so we need to design these measures to be valid and reliable
The process of creating questions (for surveys OR interviews) generally starts with defining our research topic or area of interest
We then want to design questions that look at the different thoughts, feelings, behaviours, characteristics, opinions, attitudes, & experiences related to our research topic
We should pilot any questionnaires or interview schedules before administering them to ensure there aren't any errors in understanding, and to make sure our questions are actually relevant to our topic, making any adjustments as necessary
We can then evaluate how 'good' our questions are with statistics, which we'll be covering in the next few weeks! Woohoo! 😁
Designing Effective Questionnaires
From ideas to items
Question & response types
Example items
Designing Effective Interviews
From ideas to interviews
Interview schedules
Successful probes & follow-ups
Piloting
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