Top Banner
Improved Questionnaire Design Yields Better Data: Experiences from the UK’s Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings Jacqui Jones, Pete Brodie, Sarah Williams & Jane Carter UK Office for National Statistics
31

Improved Questionnaire Design Yields Better Data: Experiences from the UKs Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings Jacqui Jones, Pete Brodie, Sarah Williams.

Mar 27, 2015

Download

Documents

Lily Dowd
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Improved Questionnaire Design Yields Better Data: Experiences from the UKs Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings Jacqui Jones, Pete Brodie, Sarah Williams.

Improved Questionnaire Design Yields Better Data: Experiences from the UK’s Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings

Jacqui Jones, Pete Brodie, Sarah Williams & Jane CarterUK Office for National Statistics

Page 2: Improved Questionnaire Design Yields Better Data: Experiences from the UKs Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings Jacqui Jones, Pete Brodie, Sarah Williams.

Overview

• Data Collection Methodology at ONS

• Methods standards

• Design standards

• Case study: The Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings

Slide 1

Page 3: Improved Questionnaire Design Yields Better Data: Experiences from the UKs Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings Jacqui Jones, Pete Brodie, Sarah Williams.

Background to DCM at ONS

• Mid 1990s 1st QTU set-up for Census

• Then expanded to include social surveys and business surveys

Slide 2

Page 4: Improved Questionnaire Design Yields Better Data: Experiences from the UKs Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings Jacqui Jones, Pete Brodie, Sarah Williams.

Methods Standards

• Aim was to develop a framework of processes to be used for all DCM question(naire) development work

• Outcome was the Data Collection Methodology Improvement and Measurement Framework

(DCM IMF)

Slide 3

Page 5: Improved Questionnaire Design Yields Better Data: Experiences from the UKs Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings Jacqui Jones, Pete Brodie, Sarah Williams.

The DCM IMF

Identification of data requirements

+Expert Review +

Evaluation Review

Stage 2 Redesign & Development

Stage 3 Pre-field Testing

Stage 4

Stage 1

Stage 5 Field Implementation

Identify and Disseminate Best Practice

Stage 7

Stage 6

Field Testing

Post-implementation Evaluation

Slide 4

Page 6: Improved Questionnaire Design Yields Better Data: Experiences from the UKs Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings Jacqui Jones, Pete Brodie, Sarah Williams.

The DCM IMF

Stage 1

Stage 2

Stage 3

Stage 4

Literature review

Expert review

Evaluation review

Instrument development

Expert review

Qualitative testing

Expert review

Re-development

Quantitative analysis

Qualitative follow-up

Slide 5

Page 7: Improved Questionnaire Design Yields Better Data: Experiences from the UKs Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings Jacqui Jones, Pete Brodie, Sarah Williams.

Design Standards

• Aim was to develop tested standards for the design of questions and questionnaires

• Outcome is draft standards

– with constraints – colour and cross boxes

Slide 6

Page 8: Improved Questionnaire Design Yields Better Data: Experiences from the UKs Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings Jacqui Jones, Pete Brodie, Sarah Williams.

Example of Design Standards

Page 9: Improved Questionnaire Design Yields Better Data: Experiences from the UKs Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings Jacqui Jones, Pete Brodie, Sarah Williams.

Example of Design Standards

Page 10: Improved Questionnaire Design Yields Better Data: Experiences from the UKs Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings Jacqui Jones, Pete Brodie, Sarah Williams.

Case Study: ASHE

• ASHE collects data for earning statistics e.g. minimum wage

• ASHE questionnaires are sent out to employers to complete on behalf of selected employees

• 250,000 sample of employees

Slide 9

Page 11: Improved Questionnaire Design Yields Better Data: Experiences from the UKs Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings Jacqui Jones, Pete Brodie, Sarah Williams.

ASHE: Need for Change

• National Statistics Quality Review

• New data requirements e.g. Pay for other reasons Pension data

• Existing data problems e.g.

Possible inclusion of pay elements in the wrong responses

Slide 10

Page 12: Improved Questionnaire Design Yields Better Data: Experiences from the UKs Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings Jacqui Jones, Pete Brodie, Sarah Williams.

Overview of the ‘Old’ Questionnaire

• Very cramped 2 sided questionnaire which collected 26 data items

• 4 sides of additional notes

• Respondent coding

Slide 11

Page 13: Improved Questionnaire Design Yields Better Data: Experiences from the UKs Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings Jacqui Jones, Pete Brodie, Sarah Williams.

‘Old’ Questionnaire

Slide 12

Page 14: Improved Questionnaire Design Yields Better Data: Experiences from the UKs Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings Jacqui Jones, Pete Brodie, Sarah Williams.
Page 15: Improved Questionnaire Design Yields Better Data: Experiences from the UKs Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings Jacqui Jones, Pete Brodie, Sarah Williams.

‘Old’ Questionnaire

Slide 14

Page 16: Improved Questionnaire Design Yields Better Data: Experiences from the UKs Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings Jacqui Jones, Pete Brodie, Sarah Williams.

Overview of the ‘Old’ Questionnaire

• Unclear data requirements

• Inconsistent terminology

• Double-barrelled questions

Slide 15

Page 17: Improved Questionnaire Design Yields Better Data: Experiences from the UKs Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings Jacqui Jones, Pete Brodie, Sarah Williams.

‘Old’ Questionnaire

Page 18: Improved Questionnaire Design Yields Better Data: Experiences from the UKs Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings Jacqui Jones, Pete Brodie, Sarah Williams.

ASHE Development

Followed DCM IMF processes:

• Focus group (8 large businesses)

• Pre-field testing• 30 cognitive interviews (5 waves of testing)

Waves 1-3 concurrent interviewingWaves 4-5 retrospective interviewing

Slide 17

Page 19: Improved Questionnaire Design Yields Better Data: Experiences from the UKs Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings Jacqui Jones, Pete Brodie, Sarah Williams.

ASHE Development

2004 Field tested 6 sided questionnaire:

• Split sample design (98% ‘old’ , 2% ‘new’)

• Quantitative analysisNon-responseRespondent burden (actual & perceived)Processing errors

Slide 18

Page 20: Improved Questionnaire Design Yields Better Data: Experiences from the UKs Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings Jacqui Jones, Pete Brodie, Sarah Williams.

Results of ASHE Field Test

• Response (no statistical difference)• Errors (no statistical difference)

• Respondent feedback (positive)• Respondent burden (reduced per question)• Some problems with question wording

• Costs (increased paper, printing, postage, processing)• Time (increased processing time)

Slide 19

Page 21: Improved Questionnaire Design Yields Better Data: Experiences from the UKs Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings Jacqui Jones, Pete Brodie, Sarah Williams.

6 sided to 4 sided compromises

• Minimum standard – based on testing - keep question & response category wording + instructions to stay with questions

• Challenge was to promote positive respondent perceptions and clear navigational path

• No time for further testing – redesign by DCM experts & ‘quick perception’ telephone interviews

Slide 20

Page 22: Improved Questionnaire Design Yields Better Data: Experiences from the UKs Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings Jacqui Jones, Pete Brodie, Sarah Williams.

‘Old’ Questionnaire

Slide 21

Page 23: Improved Questionnaire Design Yields Better Data: Experiences from the UKs Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings Jacqui Jones, Pete Brodie, Sarah Williams.

ASHE 6 Sided Questionnaire

Page 24: Improved Questionnaire Design Yields Better Data: Experiences from the UKs Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings Jacqui Jones, Pete Brodie, Sarah Williams.

ASHE 4 Sided Questionnaire

Page 25: Improved Questionnaire Design Yields Better Data: Experiences from the UKs Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings Jacqui Jones, Pete Brodie, Sarah Williams.

2006 ASHE 4 Sided Questionnaire

Slide 24

Page 26: Improved Questionnaire Design Yields Better Data: Experiences from the UKs Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings Jacqui Jones, Pete Brodie, Sarah Williams.

2005 Qualitative Follow-Up

• Looked at differences between responses to the 2004 ‘old’ questionnaire and the 2005 4 sided questionnaire.

• Focussed on 5 key areas e.g. the affect on basic pay of a new ‘other pay’ question

• 31 in-depth telephone interviews

Slide 25

Page 27: Improved Questionnaire Design Yields Better Data: Experiences from the UKs Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings Jacqui Jones, Pete Brodie, Sarah Williams.

‘Old’ Basic Pay Question

Slide 26

Page 28: Improved Questionnaire Design Yields Better Data: Experiences from the UKs Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings Jacqui Jones, Pete Brodie, Sarah Williams.

‘New’ Basic Pay and Other Pay Questions

Slide 27

Page 29: Improved Questionnaire Design Yields Better Data: Experiences from the UKs Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings Jacqui Jones, Pete Brodie, Sarah Williams.

‘Other Pay’ Results

Qualitative study found:• Better comprehension of new questions• Improved reporting of ‘other pay’• Respondents preferred ‘new’ layout

Quantitative analysis found:• ‘Old’ questionnaire - ‘other pay’ had been excluded

by some• Correction by imputation added 0.8% growth to

basic pay at the all employee levelSlide 28

Page 30: Improved Questionnaire Design Yields Better Data: Experiences from the UKs Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings Jacqui Jones, Pete Brodie, Sarah Williams.

What did we learn?

Must have:

• clear & agreed data requirements• agreement on the maximum number of pages• DCM experts involved in redesign & testing• method standards• design standards • improved methods for measuring data quality

Slide 29

Page 31: Improved Questionnaire Design Yields Better Data: Experiences from the UKs Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings Jacqui Jones, Pete Brodie, Sarah Williams.

Thank You

[email protected]