Summary
Contents
Subject index
Engaging and informative, this book provides students and researchers with a pragmatic, new perspective on the process of collecting survey data. By proposing a post-positivist, interviewee-centred approach, it improves the quality and impact of survey data by emphasising the interaction between interviewer and interviewee. Extending the conventional methodology with contributions from linguistics, anthropology, cognitive studies and ethnomethodology, Gobo and Mauceri analyse the answering process in structured interviews built around questionnaires.
The following key areas are explored in detail: An historical overview of survey research; The process of preparing the survey and designing data collection; The methods of detecting bias and improving data quality; The strategies for combining quantitative and qualitative approaches; The survey within global and local contexts
Incorporating the work of experts in interpersonal and intercultural relations, this book offers readers an intriguing critical perspective on survey research.
Giampietro Gobo, Ph.D., is Professor of Methodology of Social Research and Evaluation Methods at the Department of Social and Political Studies - University of Milan. He has published over fifty articles in the areas of qualitative and quantitative methods. His books include Doing Ethnography (Sage 2008) and Qualitative Research Practice (Sage 2004, co-edited with C. Seale, J.F. Gubrium and D. Silverman). He is currently engaged in projects in the area of workplace studies.
Sergio Mauceri, Ph.D., is Lecturer in Methodology of Social Sciences and teaches Quantitative and Qualitative Strategies of Social Research at the Department of Communication and Social Research - University of Rome ‘La Sapienza’. He has published several books and articles on data quality in survey research, mixed strategies, ethnic prejudice, multicultural cohabitation, delay in the transition to adulthood, worker well-being in call centres and homophobia.
Glocalizing the Survey
Glocalizing the Survey
The world continues to change and the survey cannot remain anchored in the cultural models of the 1930s. It too must evolve, not only technically and technologically (as it is already doing), but also culturally. What direction will this change take? The signals come from many quarters, and as we document in the course of this last chapter, point in the direction of a multicultural survey model, which will inform both research design and data collection.
14.1 • Towards Multicultural Methodology
Europe and (then) the US were the cradle of contemporary survey methodology, which can be regarded as an invention of Western academic culture. While survey methodology is the product of a local culture, during the course of the twentieth century it became something ...
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