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Statistical survey

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Statistical surveys are used to collect quantitative information about items in a population. Surveys of human populations and institutions are common in political polling and government, health, social science and marketing research. A survey may focus on opinions or factual information depending on its purpose, and many surveys involve administering questions to individuals. When the questions are administered by a researcher, the survey is called a structured interview or a researcher-administered survey. When the questions are administered by the respondent, the survey is referred to as a questionnaire or a self-administered survey.

Structure and standardization

The questions are usually structured and standardized. The structure is intended to reduce bias (see questionnaire construction). For example, questions should be ordered in such a way that a question does not influence the response to subsequent questions. Surveys are standardized to ensure reliability, generalizability, and validity (see quantitative marketing research). Every respondent should be presented with the same questions and in the same order as other respondents.

In organizational development, carefully constructed survey instruments are often used as the basis for data gathering, organizational diagnosis, and subsequent action planning. Some OD practitioners (e.g. Fred Nickols) even consider survey guided development as the sine qua non of OD.

Serial surveys

Serial surveys are those which repeat the same questions at different points in time, producing time-series data. They typically fall into two types:

Advantages of surveys

The advantages of survey techniques include:

Disadvantages of surveys

Disadvantages of survey techniques include:

Advantages of self-administered questionnaires

Advantages of self-administered questionnaires include:

Disadvantages of self-administered surveys

Advantages of researcher administered interviews

Advantages of researcher administered interviews include:

Survey methods

There are several ways of administering a survey, including:

Methods used to increase response rates

Graduate degree programs in survey methodology and survey research

Doctoral and Masters Degrees

Masters Degrees only

See also

Lists of related topics

References

Ornstein, Michael D. 1998. "Survey Research." Current Sociology 46(4): iii-136.

External links

 


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