Some Methodological Uses of Responses to Open Questions and Other Verbatim Comments in Quantitative Surveys
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Abstract
The use of open-ended questions in survey research has a very long history. In this paper, building on the work of Paul F. Lazarsfeld and Howard Schuman, we review the methodological uses of open-ended questions and verbatim responses in surveys. We draw on prior research, our own and that of others, to argue for increasing the use of open-ended questions in quantitative surveys. The addition of open-ended questions – and the capture and analysis of respondents’ verbatim responses to other types of questions – may yield important insights, not only into respondents’ substantive answers, but also into how they understand the questions we ask and arrive at an answer. Adding a limited number of such questions to computerized surveys, whether self- or interviewer-administered, is neither expensive nor time-consuming, and in our experience respondents are quite willing and able to answer such questions.
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Singer, E., & Couper, M. P. (2017). Some Methodological Uses of Responses to Open Questions and Other Verbatim Comments in Quantitative Surveys. Methods, Data, Analyses, 11(2), 115–134. https://doi.org/10.12758/mda.2017.01
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Research Report

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