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Geared to the non-statistician, this book covers all phases of survey design and implementation, examining data collection, offering advice on asking targeted questions, improving accuracy and quality of responses and reducing sampling and non-sampling bias.
Surveys enjoy great ubiquity among data collection methods in social research: they are flexible in questioning techniques, in the amount of questions asked, in the topics covered, and in the various ways of interactions with respondents. Surveys are also the preferred method by many researchers in the social sciences due to their ability to provide quick profiles and results. Because they are so commonly used and fairly easy to administer, surveys are often thought to be easily thrown together. But designing an effective survey that yields reliable and valid results takes more than merely asking questions and waiting for the answers to arrive. Geared to the non-statistician, the Handbook of Survey Methodology in Social Sciences addresses issues throughout all phases of survey design and implementation. Chapters examine the major survey methods of data collection, providing expert guidelines for asking targeted questions, improving accuracy and quality of responses, while reducing sampling and non-sampling bias. Relying on the Total Survey Error theory, various issues of both sampling and non-sampling sources of error are explored and discussed. By covering all aspects of the topic, the Handbook is suited to readers taking their first steps in survey methodology, as well as to those already involved in survey design and execution, and to those currently in training. Featured in the Handbook: • The Total Survey Error: sampling and non-sampling errors. • Survey sampling techniques. • The art of question phrasing. • Techniques for increasing response rates • A question of ethics: what is allowed in survey research? • Survey design: face-to-face, phone, mail, e-mail, online, computer-assisted.? • Dealing with sensitive issues in surveys. • Demographics of respondents: implications for future survey research. • Dealing with nonresponse, and nonresponse bias The Handbook of Survey Methodology in Social Sciences offers how-to clarity forresearchers in the social and behavioral sciences and related disciplines, including sociology, criminology, criminal justice, social psychology, education, public health, political science, management, and many other disciplines relying on survey methodology as one of their main data collection tools.
Comprehensive overview of survey methodology in the social sciences Covers survey design, to data collection, to result analysis Statistical principles and techniques targeted for Social Scientists Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras
Auteur
Lior Gideon, Ph.D., is a Full time Professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York, New York. Is a devout methodologist, and have over 15 years of international experience in teaching methodology courses and training future cohorts of researchers in the field of criminology and criminal justice research. He also specializes in corrections-based program evaluation and focuses his research on rehabilitation, reentry, and reintegration issues and in particular by examining offenders' perceptions of their needs. To that extent, Dr. Gideon developed many survey based measurement to examine level of punitiveness, attitudes supportive of rehabilitation, and recently measures of social support. His research interests also involve international and comparative corrections-related public opinion surveys and their affect on policy. To that extent, Dr. Gideon published several manuscripts on these topics, including two previously published books on offenders needs in the reintegration process: Substance Abusing Inmates: Experiences of Recovering Drug Addicts on Their Way Back Home (2010, Springer), and Rethinking Corrections: Rehabilitation, Reentry, and Reintegration (with Hung-En Sung, 2011, Sage). Aside from the above, Dr. Gideon has published a methodology book titled Theories of Research Methodology: readings in methods, which is now available in its second addition. His other works were recently published in The Prison Journal, the International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology, and the Asian Journal of Criminology. Dr. Gideon earned his PhD from the Faculty of Law, Institute of Criminology at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, Israel, and completed a postdoctoral fellowship at the University of Maryland's Bureau of Governmental Research.
Contenu
Acknowledgements.-Introduction.-Classification of Surveys.-Survey Ethics: What Are We Allowed To Do In Survey Research.-The Salient Bias in Survey Research: Total Survey Error (TSE).-Common Survey Sampling Techniques.-Frames, Framing Effects, and Survey Response.-The Art of Question Phrasing.-Interviewing.-Unit Nonresponse Due to Refusal.-Controlling for Response Error, and Quality of Response.-Why Do People Agree to Participate in Surveys.-Respondents Cooperation: Demographic Profile of Survey Respondents and Its Implications.-Effects of Incentives in Surveys.-Designing the Face to Face Survey.-Repeated Cross Sectional Surveys Using FTF.-Cost and Error in Fixed and Mobile Phone Surveys.-Mail Surveys in Social Research.-Email Surveys.-Increasing Response Rate in Web Based/Internet Surveys.-How to Build Your Own Online Survey Panel.-Does Paying More Mean Getting Better Product?: Comparison of Survey Modes of Administration.-Sensitive Issues in Surveys: Reducing Refusals While Increasing Reliability and Quality of Response.-Researching Difficult Populations: Interviewing Techniques and Methodological Issues in FTF.-What Survey Modes Are Most Effective in Eliciting Self-Reports of Criminal or Delinquent Behavior.-Issues in Survey Designing: Using Surveys of Victimization and Fear of Crime as Examples.-What Would You Do? Conducting Web Based Factorial Vignette Surveys.-Comparability of Survey Measurements.-Employee Surveys as Catalysts for Change: Turning Data into Action.