SCI 802 - Lecture 9 - Introduction To SPSS
SCI 802 - Lecture 9 - Introduction To SPSS
Lecture 9:
An Introduction to SPSS
Prof Tanko Ishaya
University of Jos
Contents
Designing a study
Desinging a questionnaires
Preparing a codebook
An introduction to SPSS
Defining Variables
Entering Data
Analyzing Data
SPSS Output
Analyzing Data
Max, Min, Range
Percentiles
Mode, Median, Mean
Standard Deviation
SPSS interface: data view and variable view
2
Designing a study
The data you enter into SPSS must come
from somewhere
Responses to questionnaires
Information collected from interviewers
Coded observations of actual behaviour or
Measurements of output or performances
Remember that the data are only as good as
the instrument you used to collect them
and the research framework/design that
guided their collection
3
Planning the study
Recall the overall process of research
Review of the literature
Formulation of
hypothesis/questions/aims/objectives
Choice of study design
Selection of subjects
Recording of observations and
Collection of data
Decisions made at each of these stages can
affect the quality of the data you have to
analyze and the way you address the research
questions
4
Some tips on Designing your study
What type of research design (e.g. experiment, survey, observation) is
the best way to address your research questions
If an experiment, decide whether a between- groups design or a
repeated measures design
Make sure you include enough levels in you independent variables in
experimental
Always select more subjects than you need, particularly if you are using
human subjects
Check that you have enough subjects in each of the groups and try to
keep them equal when possible
Wherever possible, randomly assign subjects to each of your
experimental conditions rather than using existing groups
Choice appropriate dependent variables that are valid and reliable
Try to anticipate the possible influence of extraneous or confounding
variables
If you are distributing a survey, pilot-test it first to ensure that the
instruments, questions and scale items are clear
5
Choose Appropriate Scales and Measures
What measures have been used by other researchers in
the area?
Two characteristics to be aware of in choosing appropriate
scales:
Reliability
Test-retest reliability ( temporal stability) – administering a
test to the same people on two different occasions
Internal consistency - the degree to which the items that make
up the scale are all measuring the same the same underlying
attribute.
Validity
Content validity - adequacy with which a measure has sampled
from the intended universe or domain of content
Criteria validity – relationship b/w scale scores and some
specified, measurable criterion
Construct validity- investigating its relationship with other
constructs
6
Designing a Questionnaire
Contents
Objectives of questionnaires
Advantages and disadvantages
Design of questionnaires
Type of questions used
Common problems and pitfalls
Exercise of designing a questionnaire using
MS Excel
8
What are the sources of research data?
Physical signals
Temperature
Atmospheric pressure
...
Medical records, demography,
census bureau, Case reports
?
Individual experience
QUESTIONNAIRES
9
What is a questionnaire?
An instrument (form) to
collect answers to questions
collect factual data
gathers information or measures
A series of written questions/items in a
fixed, rational order
10
Why using a questionnaire?
A well designed questionnaire:
Gives accurate and relevant information
to your research question
Minimises potential sources of bias
Will more likely be completed
11
Advantages of Questionnaires
Can reach a large number of people
relatively easily and economically
Provide quantifiable answers
Relatively easy to analyse
12
Disadvantages of Questionnaires
Provides only limited insight into problem
Limited response allowed by questions
Maybe not the right questions are asked
Varying response
Misunderstanding/misinterpretation
Need to get it right first time
Hard to chase after missing data
13
Types of Questionnaires
Interviewer-Administered
Face-t0-face
Telephone
Advantages
Clarification of ambiguity
Quick answers
Participation by illiterate people
Self-Administered
By post
Email
Internet /Online
Advantages
Cheap and easy to administer
Preserves confidentiality
Completed at respondent's convenience
No influence by interviewer
14
Questionnaire Design – Planning
Decide on goals
Identify risk factors for getting bitten by dogs
Know the subject
Literature, experts on dog bites
Formulate a hypothesis
Postmen more likely to get bitten by dogs than the
normal population
Define information needed to test hypothesis
Occupation, owning dog, outdoor activities, attitude
towards dogs
15
Questionnaire Design – Design Questions
16
What makes a well designed questionnaire?
Good appearance
® easy on the eye
Short and simple
Relevant and logical
High response rate
17
Rules of Questionnaire Design ?
On first page
Return address
Study title in bold
On all pages
Identifying mark/
unique identifier
Numbered items
Page numbers
Directions in bold
Self-addressed envelope!!
18
Questionnaire Order
Decide on order of items/questions
Easy difficult
General particular
Factual abstract
Where to place sensitive questions?
Be aware of ordering effects
Group questions by topic/ response options
Starting questions
Simple
With closed format
Relevant to main subject
Non-offending
Neither demographic nor personal questions
Don’t put most important item last
19
Questionnaire Introduction
Covering letter/ interview
introduction
Who you are/ you work for
Why you are investigating
Where you obtained the respondent’s name
How and where you can be contacted
Guarantee of confidentiality
Length of interview (be honest)
⇒ Usefulness of study should be clear
to all respondents
20
Contents
Clear focus on research question
Avoid sidetracking
Avoid unnecessary information
Demographic information
Contact information (if non-
anonymised)
21
Format of questions
Adjust to responding audience
Professionals vs. public
Middle class vs. prisoners
Keep sentences simple and short
Define key words (“fully vaccinated”)
Remember option “don’t know”
22
Format of questions
Ask for one information at a time
Do you own a dog or have frequent contacts
with dogs?
Yes
No
Use mutually exclusive and
exhaustive answer options
Vertical order of answer options
23
Be accurate
Do you often touch dogs?
Yes
No
vs.
How often did you touch a dog during the
past 3 months?
Once
Twice
Three times or more
Not at all
Don´t know
24
Be appropriate
Are you a drunk?
Yes
No
vs.
How often did you touch a dog during the
past 3 months?
Once
Twice
Three times or more
Not at all
Don´t know
25
Be objective
Did you drink the strange Moss drink in Jos?
Yes
No
vs.
Which beverage did you consume?
Water
Beer
Wine
Moss
None of them
Don´t know
26
Format of questions
Two main question formats
Closed format forced choice
Yes Always
No Sometimes
Don’t know Never
Open format free text
What is your most distressing symptom? Please
describe:
________________________________________________
________________________________________________
Closed questions are usually quite easy to convert to the numerical format
required for SPSS. Eg. Yes can be coded as 1, No as 2
Open or Closed?
Open Advantages:
Not directive
Allows exploration of issues
to generate hypothesis
qualitative research, focus groups, trawling questionnaires
Used even if no comprehensive range of alternative choices
Good for exploring knowledge and attitudes
Detailed and unexpected answers possible
Closed Advantages:
Simple and quick
Reduces discrimination against less literate
Easy to code, record, analyse
Easy to compare
Easy to report results
28
Open or Closed?
Open Disadvantages:
Interviewer bias
Time-consuming
Coding problems
Difficult to analyse!
Difficult to compare groups
Closed Disadvantages:
Restricted number of possible answers
Loss of information
Possible compromise
29
Objectives of Questionnaires
Drawing together a wide range
of other peoples work into a
story which works for your
project
30
Preparing a codebook
Before Data Entry
Design your research
You need a code book/scoring guide
You give ID number for each case (NOT
real identification numbers of your
subjects) if you use paper survey.
If you use online survey, you need
something to identify your cases.
You also can use Excel to do data entry.
32
What is a Codebook
A code book is about how you code your
variables.
What are in codebook?
Variable names
Values for each response option
How to recode variables
33
Example of a Code Book
Q1. How old are you?
34
Introduction to SPSS
What is SPSS?
Originally an acronym that stands for “Statistical
Package for the Social Sciences”. Now it stands for
Statistical Product and Service Solution
One of the most popular statistical packages that
can perform complex data manipulation, analysis
and graphical presentation of data
Well suited for survey and experimental research
It is a straight forward package with a friendly
environment.
There is a lot of easy to access documentation and the
tutorials are very good.
36
Uses of SPSS
Data management
Defining variables
Coding values
Entering and editing data
Creating new variables
Recoding variables
Selecting cases
Data analysis
Univariate statistics
Bivariate statistics
Multivariate statistics
37
Types of Variables
What are variables you would consider
in buying a second hand bike?
OR
46
What is SPSS?
Originally an acronym that stands for “Statistical
Package for the Social Sciences”. Now it stands for
Statistical Product and Service Solution
One of the most popular statistical packages that
can perform complex data manipulation, analysis
and graphical presentation of data
Well suited for survey and experimental research
It is a straight forward package with a friendly
environment.
There is a lot of easy to access documentation and the
tutorials are very good.
47
Basic Structure of SPSS
Unlike in Excel, SPSS files have 2 “sides”: the
Data view which looks very much like an Excel
file and a Variable view which is a kind of
“behind the scenes” thing.
Data view
The place to enter data
Columns: variables
Rows: records
Variable view
The place to enter variables
List of all variables
Characteristics of all variables
48
SPSS Data View
49
SPSS Variable View
51
The End!