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Methods For Collecting Data

The document discusses different methods for collecting data including questionnaires, interviews, observation, registration or census, and experimentation. It provides details on administering and analyzing each method, and notes their advantages and disadvantages. The document also includes sample questionnaires, interview questions, and protocols for observation and registration.

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DI AN NE
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© © All Rights Reserved
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
30 views

Methods For Collecting Data

The document discusses different methods for collecting data including questionnaires, interviews, observation, registration or census, and experimentation. It provides details on administering and analyzing each method, and notes their advantages and disadvantages. The document also includes sample questionnaires, interview questions, and protocols for observation and registration.

Uploaded by

DI AN NE
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Methods for Collecting

Data

1
Objectives:

 Describe each method of data collection

 Compare and contrast each method of data


collection

 Show eagerness to learn the concept through


varied activities
 Value the method of data collection

2
Activity:

 The teacher will let the students to watch a


video and the learners will take notes of the
data that they have seen the video.

 Video 1
 Video 2
 Video 3

3
Analysis:

 What can you say about the video? or how


do you feel while watching the video?

 What data have you gathered after watching


the video?

 What are the method/s that are used in the


video?

4
Techniques or Methods for Collecting
Data:
1. Questionnaires
2. Interviews
3. Observation
4. Registration or Census
5. Experimentation

5
Using these data gathering methods

 Each method has advantages and problems. No single


method can fully measure the variable important to OD
 Examples:
 Questionnaires and surveys are open to self-report
biases, such as respondents’ tendency to give socially
desirable answers rather than honest opinions.
 Observations are susceptible to observer biases, such

as seeing what one wants to see rather than what is


actually there.

6
Use more than one

 Because of the biases inherent in any data-collection


method, it is best to use more than one method when
collecting diagnostic data.
 The data from the different methods can be compared,
and if consistent, it is likely the variables are being validly
measured.

7
Demographics

 Information about the people you are gathering data


from is important.
 Collect the specific demographics necessary. Some
examples
 Age
 Gender
 Income level
 Ethnic background
 Status (student, teacher, visitor)
 Be careful not to collect demographics that are not
specific to your data collection purpose.
8
Questionnaires:
 Questionnaires are one of the most efficient ways to
collect data.
 They contain fixed-response questions about various
features of an organization.
 These on-line or paper-and pencil measures can be
administered to large numbers of people simultaneously.
 They can be analyzed quickly.
 They can be easily be fed back to employees.
 Questionnaires can be standard based on common
research or they can be customized to meet the specific
data gathering need.

9
Questionnaires; there are drawbacks;

 Responses are limited to the questions asked in the


instrument.
 They provide little opportunity to probe for additional data
or ask for points of clarification.
 They tend to be impersonal.
 Often elicit response biases – tend to answer in a
socially acceptable manner.

10
Sample Employee / Management Relationship Survey

Team Goals and Objectives


Unclear; diverse; conflicting 1 2 3 4 5 Clear; understood; shared by
all.
Role Clarity
Employees are unclear about 1 2 3 4 5 Employees are clear about
their roles; responsibilities and what is expected of them;
authority are ambiguous. they know their
responsibilities and authority.
Communications
Employees are guarded and 1 2 3 4 5 Employees are open and
cautious when communicating authentic when
with management communicating with
management
Decision Making
Little opportunity for input; 1 2 3 4 5 Decisions made jointly
uninvolved; decisions made through group participation;
autonomously. plenty of opportunity for
input; persons affected
asked for their opinion. 11
Interviews

 Interviews are probably the most widely used technique


for collecting data in OD.
 They permit the interviewer to ask the respondent direct
questions.
 Further probing and clarification is possible as the
interview proceeds.
 This flexibility is invaluable for gaining private views and
feelings about the organization and exploring new issues
that emerge during the interview.

12
Interviews

 Interviews may be highly structured, resembling


questionnaires, or highly unstructured, starting with
general questions that allow the respondent to lead the
way.
 Interviews are usually conducted one-to-one but can be
carried out in a group.
 Group interviews save time and allow people to build on
other’s responses.
 Group interviews may, however, inhibit respondent’s
answers if trust is an issue.

13
Interviews / Focus Groups

 Another unstructured group meeting


conducted by a manager or a consultant.
 A small group of 10-15 people is selected
representing a larger group of people
 Group discussion is started by asking general
questions and group members are
encouraged to discuss their answers in some
depth.
 The richness and validity of this information
will depend on the extent that trust exists.
14
Drawback to interviews
 They can consume a great deal of time if interviewers
take full advantage of the opportunity to hear respondents
out and change their questions accordingly.
 Personal biases can also distort the data.
 The nature of the question and the interactions between
the interviewer and the respondent may discourage or
encourage certain kinds of responses.
 It take considerable skill to gather valid data.

15
Sample Interview Questions

1. How do management and non-management


employees interact in the office?
2. How do you know when you have done an excellent
job?
3. How do non-management employees learn about
organizational change?
4. If you could change one or two things about the way
management and non-management personnel interact,
what would you change?

16
Observations

 Observing organizational behaviors in their functional


settings is one of the most direct ways to collect data.
 Observation can range from complete participant
observation, where the OD practitioner becomes a
member of the group under study to a more detached
observation using a casually observing and noting
occurrences of specific kinds of behaviors.

17
Advantages to Observation:

 They are free of the biases inherent in the self-report


data.
 They put the practitioner directly in touch with the
behaviors in question.
 They involved real-time data, describing behavior
occurring in the present rather than the past.
 They are adapting in that they can be modified
depending on what is being observed.

18
Problems with Observation

 Difficulties interpreting the meaning underlying the


observations.
 Observers must decide which people to observe; choose
time periods, territory and events
 Failure to attend to these sampling issues can result in a
biased sample of data.

19
Observation Protocol

 A decision needs to be made on what to observe.


 Example:
 Observe how managers and employees interact in the

office.
 Observe who has lunch with whom. (Do managers

and non-managers eat together? Do executives have


a private lunch area?)

20
Registration or Census

 this method requires the enactment of law to


take effect because it needs the participation
of a large, if not the entire, population.
 is the procedure of systematically acquiring
and recording information about the members
of a given population

21
Sample Registration or Census

22
Experimentation

 this method is usually conducted in


laboratories where specimens are subjected
to some aspects of control to find out cause
and effect relationship.

23
Application:

 Students will then be group in 4 groups. They


are to choose two of the methods of
collecting data. After choosing two varied
methods, they are task to compare and
contrast the method using creative
presentation like: (Role play, Talk Show,
Debate and Musical).

24
Assessment:
 Identify the most appropriate methods of
collecting data to be used in each of the
following research topic. Explain your choice.
 1 Answer
 2 Answer
 3 Answer
 4 Answer
 5 Answer
 6 Answer

25
Have a nice day and Thank you!!!
To God be the Glory

dda2020

26

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