Questionnaire Design
Revision as of 18:18, 3 February 2017 by Maria jones (talk | contribs)
This topic cover questionnaire design and measurement issues.
Read First
Do start with a careful review of existing survey instruments that cover similar topics. Don't reinvent the wheel -- working from a high-quality, previously-piloted survey instrument will save time and improve the quality of your final output.
Guidelines
Questionnaire design process
When designing a survey instrument from scratch, follow these steps:
- Review (or draft) a Theory of Change and Pre-Analysis Plan.
- Make a list of all intermediary and final outcomes of interest, as well as important covariates and sources of heterogeneity
- Prepare an outline of questionnaire modules, based on the above list. Get feedback from research team.
- For each module, prepare a list of specific indicators to measure. Get feedback from research team and implementing partners.
- Review existing questionnaires and compile databank of relevant questions for each module
- Draft questionnaire, noting source of each question (e.g. source: Uganda National Panel Survey (LSMS 2013-14), source: Uganda DHS 2011, source: Uganda Social Assistance Grants for Empowerment Programme 2013, Evaluation Follow-Up Survey [1], source: own design - extra attention required in pilot), and get feedback from research team and implementing partners
- Survey Pilot: Content-based Pilot
- Questionnaire Translation
- Questionnaire Programming
Literature Review for Survey Instrument
Review existing surveys to understand how others have measured the key indicators you are interested in.
Unique ID
Informed Consent
Measurement Issues
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This article is part of the topic Questionnaire Design
Additional Resources
Blogs related to questionnaire design
- Reasons not to do a list experiment: http://andrewgelman.com/2014/04/23/thinking-list-experiment-heres-list-reasons-think/
Comprehensive resources on survey design
- Margaret Grosh and Paul Glewwe. 2000. Designing Household Survey Questionnaires for Developing Countries: Lessons from 15 Years of the Living Standards Measurement Study. Volumes 1, 2, and 3. The World Bank.[2]
- Dhar, Diva. Instrument Design 101 [Powerpoint Slides]. Retried from https://www.povertyactionlab.org/sites/default/files/documents/Instrument%20Design_Diva_final.pdf