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Constructing Questions for Interviews and Questionnaires
Theory and Practice in Social Research

Provides a coherent, theoretical basis for the construction of valid and reliable questions for interviews and questionnaires.

William Foddy (Author)

9780521420099, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 29 January 1993

244 pages, 10 b/w illus. 11 tables
22.9 x 15.2 x 1.7 cm, 0.53 kg

The success of any interview or questionnaire depends upon good question design, yet most of the available literature has been devoted to interview techniques, rather than question formulation. This practical book provides a coherent, theoretical basis for the construction of valid and reliable questions for interviews and questionnaires. The theoretical framework used in the book provides a set of principles that, when followed, will increase the validity and reliability of verbal data collected for social research. Dr Foddy outlines the problems which can arise when framing questions with clarity and commonsense. He has written a wide ranging, useful book for survey practitioners working in the social sciences.

Preface
1. An initial statement of the problem
2. A theoretical framework
3. Defining topics properly
4. Formulating intelligible requests for information
5. Contextual influences on respondent's interpretations of questions
6. The need to provide response frameworks
7. The limitations of human memory
8. Filters: establishing the relevance of questions to the respondents
9. Reducing question threat
10. The open vs closed question debate: coding reponses to open questions and formulating sets of response options for closed questions
11. Measuring attitudes
12. Checks to ensure that questions work as they are intended to work
Conclusions
References.

Subject Areas: Biography: historical, political & military [BGH]

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