How To Construct A Questionnaire - CGS
How To Construct A Questionnaire - CGS
How To Construct A Questionnaire - CGS
Its importance
The collection of data is an extremely
important part of all research endeavors, for the
conclusions of a study are based on what the
data reveal. Thus construction of data-collection
instrument, method of collection, data to be
collected, and the scoring of the data need
extra care and consideration.
What does it mean?
“The whole process of collecting data is
called instrumentation. It involves not only
the selection design of the instruments but
also the conditions under the instruments
will be administered.” (Fraenkel). Important
questions to ask:
Where will the data be collected (Location)
When will it be collected (time of collection)
How often are the data collected (frequency)
Who is to collect (administration)
What is data?
The term data refers to the kinds of
information researchers obtain on the
subjects of their research.
Examples of data:
Demographics: age, gender, religion, etc.
Response to oral interviews
Response to survey
Essays written by students
School documents
Anecdotal records
Etc.
Who provides the information?
Researcher instruments (Observation)
Directly from the subjects of the study
(questionnaire, daily logs etc.)
From others, frequently referred to as
informants, who are knowledgeable about the
subjects (e.g. Teachers are asked by a
researcher to use a rating scale to rate each of
their students. Parents are asked to keep
anecdotal records)
Classification of Instruments
Written-response-type instruments (include
multiple choice, true-false, matching, tests,
short essay examinations, questionnaires,
interview schedules, rating scales, and
checklists.)
Performance-type-instruments (any
instrument designed to measure either a
procedure or a product
Procedures are ways of doing things
Products are the end results of the procedures
Data Collection Instruments
Researcher Subjects complete
completes Questionnaires
Rating scales Self-checklists
Interview schedules Attitude scales
Tally sheets Personality inventories
Flowcharts Achievement aptitude
Performance tests
checklist
Performance test
Anecdotal records
Projective devices
Time-and-motion logs
Sociometric devices
Research-Completed Instruments
Instrument Description
Rating scale Intended to convey the rater’ judgment about an individual’s
behavior or product.
Amount
1 Too little 2 About the right amount 3 Too much
1 Not enough 2 About the right amount 3 Too many
Evaluation
1 Excellent 2 Good 3 Fair 4 Poor
Principles of Questionnaire Construction
11.Use multiple items to measure abstract constructs through
summated rating scale (e.g. Likert scale)
Summated rating scale is a multi-item scale that has the
responses for each person summed into a single score
12. Consider using multiple methods when measuring abstract
constructs. (One may do better in a specific measurement than
the other)
13. Use caution if you reverse the wording in some of the items
to prevent response sets in multi-item scales
Reverse wording = tendency for a participant to respond to a
series of items in a specific direction, regardless of the
differences in item content
14. Develop a questionnaire that is properly organized and easy
for the participant to use
15. Always pilot test your questionnaire.