Data Colection Methods
Data Colection Methods
Week
Introduction
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Data Collection Strategies
No one best way: decision depends on:
What you need to know: numbers or stories
Where the data reside: environment, files, people
Resources and time available
Complexity of the data to be collected
Frequency of data collection
Intended forms of data analysis
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Rules for Collecting Data
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Rules for Collecting Data
If must collect original data:
be sensitive to burden on others
pre-test, pre-test, pre-test
establish procedures and follow them (protocol)
maintain accurate records of definitions and coding
verify accuracy of coding, data input
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Structured Approach
All data collected in the same way
Especially important for multi-site and cluster evaluations
so you can compare
Important when you need to make comparisons with
alternate interventions
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Use Structured Approach When:
need to address extent questions
have a large sample or population
know what needs to be measured
need to show results numerically
need to make comparisons across different sites or
interventions
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Semi-structured Approach
Systematic and follow general procedures but data are not
collected in exactly the same way every time
More open and fluid
Does not follow a rigid script
may ask for more detail
people can tell what they want in their own way
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Use Semi-structured Approach when:
conducting exploratory work
seeking understanding, themes, and/or issues
need narratives or stories
want in-depth, rich, “backstage” information
seek to understand results of data that are unexpected
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Characteristics of Good Measures
Is the measure relevant?
Is the measure credible?
Is the measure valid?
Is the measure reliable?
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Relevance
Does the measure Do not measure what
capture what matters? is easy instead of
what is needed
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Credibility
Is the measure believable? Will it be viewed
as a reasonable and appropriate way to
capture the information sought?
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Internal Validity
How well does the Are waiting lists a
measure capture what valid measure of
it is supposed to? demand?
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Reliability
A measure’s How reliable are:
precision and birth weights of
stability- extent to newborn infants?
which the same result speeds measured by a
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Quantitative Approach
Data in numerical form
Data that can be precisely measured
age, cost, length, height, area, volume, weight, speed, time, and
temperature
Harder to develop
Easier to analyze
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Qualitative Approach
Data that deal with description
Data that can be observed or self-reported, but not
always precisely measured
Less structured, easier to develop
Can provide “rich data” — detailed and widely
applicable
Is challenging to analyze
Is labor intensive to collect
Usually generates longer reports
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Which Data?
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Obtrusive vs. Unobtrusive Methods
Obtrusive Unobtrusive
data collection methods data collection methods
that directly obtain that do not collect
information from those information directly
being evaluated from evaluees
e.g. interviews, surveys, focus e.g., document analysis,
groups GoogleEarth, observation
at a distance, trash of the
stars
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How to Decide on Data Collection Approach
Choice depends on the situation
Each technique is more appropriate in some situations
than others
Caution: All techniques are subject to bias
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Triangulation to Increase Accuracy of Data
Triangulation of methods
collection of same information using different methods
Triangulation of sources
collection of same information from a variety of sources
Triangulation of evaluators
collection of same information from more than one evaluator
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Data Collection Tools
Participatory Methods
Records and Secondary Data
Observation
Surveys and Interviews
Focus Groups
Diaries, Journals, Self-reported Checklists
Expert Judgment
Delphi Technique
Other Tools
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Tool 1: Participatory Methods
Involve groups or communities heavily in data collection
Examples:
community meetings
mapping
transect walks
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Community Meetings
One of the most common participatory methods
Must be well organized
agree on purpose
establish ground rules
who will speak
time allotted for speakers
format for questions and answers
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Mapping
Drawing or using existing maps
Useful tool to involve stakeholders
increases understanding of the community
generates discussions, verifies secondary sources of
information, perceived changes
Types of mapping:
natural resources, social, health, individual or civic assets,
wealth, land use, demographics
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Transect Walks
Evaluator walks around community observing people,
surroundings, and resources
Need good observation skills
Walk a transect line through a map of a community —
line should go through all zones of the community
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Tool 2: Records and Secondary Data
Examples of sources:
files/records
computer data bases
industry or government reports
other reports or prior evaluations
census data and household survey data
electronic mailing lists and discussion groups
documents (budgets, organizational charts, policies and
procedures, maps, monitoring reports)
newspapers and television reports
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Using Existing Data Sets
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Advantage/Challenge: Available Data
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Observation is Helpful when:
need direct information
trying to understand ongoing behavior
there is physical evidence, products, or outputs than can
be observed
need to provide alternative when other data collection is
infeasible or inappropriate
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Degree of Structure of Observations
Structured: determine, before the observation,
precisely what will be observed before the observation
Unstructured: select the method depending upon the
situation with no pre-conceived ideas or a plan on
what to observe
Semi-structured: a general idea of what to observe but
no specific plan
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Google Earth
Maps and satellite images for complex or pinpointed
regional searches
Has an Advanced version and an Earth Outreach version
Web site for Google Earth
http://earth.google.com/
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Ways to Record Information from Observations
Observation guide
printed form with space to record
Recording sheet or checklist
Yes/no options; tallies, rating scales
Field notes
least structured, recorded in narrative, descriptive style
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Guidelines for Planning Observations
Have more than one observer, if feasible
Train observers so they observe the same things
Pilot test the observation data collection
instrument
For less structured approach, have a few key
questions in mind
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Advantages and Challenges: Observation
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Tool 4: Surveys and Interviews
Excellent for asking people about:
perceptions, opinions, ideas
Less accurate for measuring behavior
Sample should be representative of the whole
Big problem with response rates
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Structures for Surveys
Structured:
Precisely worded with a range of pre-determined
responses that the respondent can select
Everyone asked exactly the same questions in exactly the
same way, given exactly the same choices
Semi-structured
Asks same general set of questions but answers to the
questions are predominantly open-ended
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Structured vs. Semi-structured Surveys
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Mail / Phone / Internet Surveys
Literacy issues
Consider accessibility
reliability of postal service
turn-around time
Consider bias
What population segment has telephone access? Internet
access?
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Advantages and Challenges of Surveys
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Challenges of Interviews
Can be expensive, labor intensive, and time consuming
Selective hearing on the part of the interviewer may miss
information that does not conform to pre-existing beliefs
Cultural sensitivity: e.g., gender issues
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Tool 5: Focus Groups
Type of qualitative research where small homogenous
groups of people are brought together to informally
discuss specific topics under the guidance of a moderator
Purpose: to identify issues and themes, not just interesting
information, and not “counts”
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Focus Groups Are Inappropriate when:
language barriers are insurmountable
evaluator has little control over the situation
trust cannot be established
free expression cannot be ensured
confidentiality cannot be assured
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Focus Group Process
Phase Action
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Advantages and Challenges of Focus Groups
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Tool 6: Diaries and Self-Reported Checklists
Use when you want to capture information about events in
people’s daily lives
Participants capture experiences in real-time not later in a
questionnaire
Used to supplement other data collection
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Guidelines for Diaries or Journals
Step Process
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Advantages and Challenges of Diaries and
Self-reported Checklists
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Tool 7: Expert Judgment
Use of experts, one-on-one Can be structured or
or as a panel unstructured
E.g., Government task Issues in selecting experts
forces, Advisory Groups
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Selecting Experts
Establish criteria for selecting experts not only on
recognition as expert but also based on:
areas of expertise
diverse perspectives
diverse political views
diverse technical expertise
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Advantages and Challenges of Expert
Judgment
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Tool 8: Delphi Technique
Enables experts to engage remotely in a dialogue
and reach consensus, often about priorities
Experts asked specific questions; often rank
choices
Responses go to a central source, are summarized
and fed back to the experts without attribution
Experts can agree or argue with others’ comments
Process may be iterative
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Advantages and Challenges of Delphi
Technique
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Other Measurement Tools
- scales (weight) - health testing tools:
- tape measure i.e. blood pressure
- stop watches - aptitude and
- chemical tests : achievement tests
i.e. quality of water -citizen report cards
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Data Collection Summary
Choose more than one data collection technique
No “best” tool
Do not let the tool drive your work but rather choose the
right tool to address the evaluation question
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Questions?
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