241x Filetype PPTX File size 1.76 MB Source: s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com
CONTENTS • Introduction • The household questionnaire survey • The street survey • The telephone survey • The mail survey • E-surveys • User/site/visitor surveys • Captive group surveys • Questionnaire design • Coding • Validity of questionnaire-based data • Conducting questionnaire surveys Introduction • Definitions and terminology • Roles • Merits of questionnaire surveys • Limitations • Interviewer-completion or respondent-completion? • Types of questionnaire survey A. J. Veal & S. Darcy (2014) Research Methods for Sport Studies and Sport Management: A practical guide. London: Routledge Definitions • Questionnaire or ‘interview schedule’: – A printed or on-line list of questions • Survey – Whole process of conducting an investigation which involves a number of ‘subjects’ • Questionnaire survey – A survey involving the use of a questionnaire • ie. a ‘survey’ is not a ‘questionnaire’ A. J. Veal & S. Darcy (2014) Research Methods for Sport Studies and Sport Management: A practical guide. London: Routledge Roles of questionnaire surveys • Used when a specified range of information required • Typically involve just a sample of the population being studied –for implications see Ch. 13, Sampling • But, the aim is to make inferred statements about the population as a whole A. J. Veal & S. Darcy (2014) Research Methods for Sport Studies and Sport Management: A practical guide. London: Routledge Merits of questionnaire surveys • An ideal method of providing policy-related data • Transparent methodology • Quantification easily communicated/understood • Repeat surveys can study change over time • Can cover a wide range of (sporting) activities • Can study attitudes, meanings, perceptions of population as a whole A. J. Veal & S. Darcy (2014) Research Methods for Sport Studies and Sport Management: A practical guide. London: Routledge
no reviews yet
Please Login to review.