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Hanyu Sun; Angie Kistler; Ryan Hubbard; Brad Edwards; Marcia Swinson-Vick – Field Methods, 2024
There is abundant literature about interviewer effects on the survey process, but studies of interviewer training are quite limited. Previous research has produced mixed findings on how training affects interviewer performance. Trainings are often conducted in person despite the mixed findings. There has been no research that examines the use of…
Descriptors: Training, Performance, Interviews, Surveys
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Jonas Elis; Achim Goerres; Sabrina J. Mayer; Dennis C. Spies – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2024
For hard-to-survey populations such as ethnic minorities and immigrants, increasing survey response rates is a crucial element of the fieldwork as these populations often show a higher likelihood of not participating compared with the native population. However, no study has so far compared different strategies for mobilisation within this group.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elections, College Students, Mail Surveys
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Rebecca Walcott; Isabelle Cohen; Denise Ferris – Evaluation Review, 2024
When and how to survey potential respondents is often determined by budgetary and external constraints, but choice of survey modality may have enormous implications for data quality. Different survey modalities may be differentially susceptible to measurement error attributable to interviewer assignment, known as interviewer effects. In this…
Descriptors: Surveys, Research Methodology, Error of Measurement, Interviews
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Claudia Schmiedeberg; Jette Schröder – Field Methods, 2024
Although it has long been acknowledged that interviewers play a crucial role in the survey data collection process, there is little research concerning interviewer effects on how respondents perceive the interview. We investigate whether interviewer effects exist regarding how much respondents report having enjoyed the interview and whether these…
Descriptors: Interviews, Data Collection, Surveys, Attitudes
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Ádám Stefkovics – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2025
Interviewer effects in telephone surveys on political topics are likely to occur. The literature has yielded considerable evidence about the impact of basic interviewer characteristics, but research is lacking on how interviewers' beliefs may shape responses. This study is aimed at assessing the association between the interviewers' party…
Descriptors: Interviews, Political Attitudes, Telephone Surveys, Political Issues
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Andrea Dawn Frazier; Cindy S. Ticknor; Kristin Seamon Lilly – Journal of Advanced Academics, 2025
Despite the utility of cognitive interviews, very few studies report on the practical application of this survey design procedure. Likewise, very few studies querying perceptions of honors education incorporate valid survey items that reflect the views of students of color who are eligible yet opt out of participation. We respond to these areas of…
Descriptors: Honors Curriculum, Minority Group Students, Student Participation, Interviews
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Robert Whitaker; Donna A. Morere – Journal of Deaf Studies and Deaf Education, 2025
Only about 1% of the children receiving special education services are deaf or hard of hearing (DHH). This group of children is highly heterogeneous with respect to a range of factors such as age of onset, degree of hearing loss, language and communication choices and access, and educational settings. Capturing the complex background of a DHH…
Descriptors: Hard of Hearing, Children, Test Construction, Evaluation Methods
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Foucault Welles, Brooke; Sun, Hanyu; Miller, Peter V. – Field Methods, 2022
We examine relationships between interviewers' nonverbal behaviors and adequate responding in face-to-face survey interviews. We videotaped professional interviewers administering face-to-face survey interviews and coded them for three interviewer nonverbal behaviors: smiling, nodding, and direct gaze. These nonverbal interviewer behaviors were…
Descriptors: Nonverbal Communication, Surveys, Interviews, Responses
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Rebecca Oswald; Sarah Soppitt; Nicholas Spencer; Lauren Powell; Charlie Richardson; Sophie Coombs – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2024
This paper considers the value of a design-led methodological approach, adopted during the COVID-19 pandemic to facilitate online interviews with young people (aged 15-17) who had been involved in crime and violence in Newcastle-upon-Tyne, UK. The development of an original digital workshop and set of exercises (referred to as a tool) using…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Adolescents, Delinquency, COVID-19
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Kühne, Simon – Sociological Methods & Research, 2023
Survey interviewers can negatively affect survey data by introducing variance and bias into estimates. When investigating these interviewer effects, research typically focuses on interviewer sociodemographics with only a few studies examining the effects of characteristics that are not directly visible such as interviewer attitudes, opinions, and…
Descriptors: Surveys, Bias, Social Problems, Political Issues
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Bettencourt, Genia M.; Wells, Ryan S.; Abbott, Jordan A. – Teachers College Record, 2022
Background: Although students with disabilities are enrolling in higher education in larger numbers than ever before, they are still underrepresented in colleges and universities, particularly among four-year institutions. College choice has been explored across multiple facets, but limited research has examined the college choice processes of…
Descriptors: College Choice, Disabilities, Accessibility (for Disabled), Higher Education
Alan Donnelly; Caroline Heaton – Sage Research Methods Cases, 2022
This case study details the experiences of two researchers at a large university in the UK, in carrying out a series of cognitive interviews with students, to examine their interpretations of and responses to items on an institution-wide questionnaire. Cognitive interviewing refers to a set of techniques used to assess the ways in which…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Interviews, College Students, Questionnaires
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Dana Garbarski; Jennifer Dykema; Cameron P. Jones; Tiffany S. Neman; Nora Cate Schaeffer; Dorothy Farrar Edwards – Field Methods, 2024
Ethnoracial identity refers to the racial and ethnic categories that people use to classify themselves and others. How it is measured in surveys has implications for understanding inequalities. Yet how people self-identify may not conform to the categories standardized survey questions use to measure ethnicity and race, leading to potential…
Descriptors: Ethnicity, Racial Identification, Classification, Error of Measurement
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Seung Hee Choi; Thomas Templin; Anna Marrocco – Journal of American College Health, 2025
Objective To develop an online discrete choice experiment (DCE) to elicit preferences for the format and content of tobacco treatment and determine the feasibility of the survey in face-to-face online interviews among college students. format content Participants A convenience sample of 28 college students. Methods A pilot online DCE survey with…
Descriptors: College Students, Preferences, Smoking, Intervention
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Smyth, Jolene D.; Olson, Kristen – Field Methods, 2020
Telephone survey interviewers need to be able to accurately record answers to questions. While straightforward for closed questions, this task can be complicated for open questions. We examine interviewer recording accuracy rates from a national landline random digit dial telephone survey. We find that accuracy rates are over 90% for numeric…
Descriptors: Interviews, Telephone Surveys, Accuracy, Coding
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