THE USE OF COGNITIVE INTERVIEWS TO EVALUATE THE LIVING CONDITIONS SURVEY


Autoria(s): Cracknell, Janel
Contribuinte(s)

Applied Health Sciences Program

Data(s)

24/03/2014

24/03/2014

24/03/2014

Resumo

Cognitive interviews were used to evaluate two draft versions of a financial survey in Jamaica. The qualitative version used a few open-ended questions, and the quantitative version used numerous close-ended questions. A secondary analysis based on the cognitive interview literature was used to guide a content analysis of the aggregate data of both surveys. The cognitive interview analysis found that the long survey had fewer respondent errors than the open-ended questions on the short survey. A grounded theory analysis then examined the aggregate cognitive data, showing that the respondents attached complex meanings to their financial information. The main limitation of this study was that the standard assessments of quantitative and qualitative reliability and validity were not utilized. Further research should utilize statistical methods to compare and contrast aggregated cognitive interview probe responses on open and close ended surveys.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10464/5276

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Brock University

Palavras-Chave #cognitive interviews, World Bank, behavioural frequency, inter-subjective meaning, living conditions survey
Tipo

Electronic Thesis or Dissertation