sp 225 lecture 4 introduction to data and levels of measurement

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SP 225 Lecture 4 Introduction to Data and Levels of Measurement

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Page 1: SP 225 Lecture 4 Introduction to Data and Levels of Measurement

SP 225Lecture 4

Introduction to Data and Levels of Measurement

Page 2: SP 225 Lecture 4 Introduction to Data and Levels of Measurement

GENERAL SOCIAL SURVEY AND SPSS

Manipulating Data Sheets

Page 3: SP 225 Lecture 4 Introduction to Data and Levels of Measurement

How Do We Collect Data to Test Hypothesis?

Natural Sciences Physical Measurements Observations

Social Sciences Survey Data Community Observations Interviews

Page 4: SP 225 Lecture 4 Introduction to Data and Levels of Measurement

Preparing Data For Analysis

Enter data from survey to spreadsheet Adopt a common meaning for

spreadsheet entries Called a ‘code’ Used to standardize entries Protect against data entry errors

Page 5: SP 225 Lecture 4 Introduction to Data and Levels of Measurement

Survey Data

Standardizing and interpreting responses Managing missing or erroneous

responses

Page 6: SP 225 Lecture 4 Introduction to Data and Levels of Measurement

Designing Better Surveys

Remove opportunities for question misinterpretation

Change survey administration method

Page 7: SP 225 Lecture 4 Introduction to Data and Levels of Measurement

General Social Survey

Began in 1972 Began as an annual study Currently conducted on even years Administered by the University of

Chicago National Opinion Research Center

Funded by the National Institute of Science and Foundations

Page 8: SP 225 Lecture 4 Introduction to Data and Levels of Measurement

Usage

Over 12,000 research uses 250,000 students use the data annually

Page 9: SP 225 Lecture 4 Introduction to Data and Levels of Measurement

Study Design

Block Design Cluster Design Methodology has been varied to

understand any impact methodology has on study results

We can analyze it as a random sample

Page 10: SP 225 Lecture 4 Introduction to Data and Levels of Measurement

Study Questions

Some questions asked every year Other mini-studies administered each

year

Page 11: SP 225 Lecture 4 Introduction to Data and Levels of Measurement

Topics by Year Extending Scales on Race, Abortion, and Feminism.

(1977) Attitudes on the Military and Military Recruitment. (1982) Social Networks. (1985) Sociopolitical Participation. (1987) Religion. (1988) Intergroup Relations. (1990) Work Organizations. (1991) Culture. (1993) Family Mobility and Multiculturalism. (1994) Mental Health, Emotions, Gender, Markets and Giving

and Volunteering (1996) Job Experiences, Mental Health, Medical Care, Medical

Ethics, Culture, Religion/Religion and Health. (1998)

Page 12: SP 225 Lecture 4 Introduction to Data and Levels of Measurement

Guide to GSS Contents

http://webapp.icpsr.umich.edu/GSS/index.html

Page 13: SP 225 Lecture 4 Introduction to Data and Levels of Measurement

Manipulating Data in SPSS

Opening data sheets Viewing and reading data Creating an SPSS data sheet

Page 14: SP 225 Lecture 4 Introduction to Data and Levels of Measurement

LEVELS OF MEASUREMENT

Page 15: SP 225 Lecture 4 Introduction to Data and Levels of Measurement

Levels of Measurement

All data can be classified into one of four categories

Nominal Ordinal Interval Ratio

Page 16: SP 225 Lecture 4 Introduction to Data and Levels of Measurement

Implication of the Level of Measurement

Analysis Mathematical Calculations of the Data

Each level of measurement represents an increasing degree of complexity in the data

Page 17: SP 225 Lecture 4 Introduction to Data and Levels of Measurement

Levels of Measurement

Nominal: data consisting of names and labels (i.e.. Color)

Ordinal: data can be arranged in order but differences between data values are meaningless (i.e.. Rating systems)

Interval: data that can be arranged in order with meaningful differences between data points but no natural zero. (i.e.. Years)

Ratio: data that has the properties of interval data with a natural zero (i.e.. Weight)

Page 18: SP 225 Lecture 4 Introduction to Data and Levels of Measurement

Levels of Measurement

Page 19: SP 225 Lecture 4 Introduction to Data and Levels of Measurement

Name the Level of Measurement

Consumer reports magazine ratings of “best buy”, “recommended” and “not recommended”

Number of yes responses when 500 students are asked if they have ever engaged in binge drinking

Temperature in New York

Page 20: SP 225 Lecture 4 Introduction to Data and Levels of Measurement

M&M Example

What characteristics of a bag of M&M’s are nominal, ordinal or interval/ratio in measurement?

Page 21: SP 225 Lecture 4 Introduction to Data and Levels of Measurement

Levels of Measurement in Data Collection

Identifying levels of measurement from a survey question

Changing the level of measurement Identifying levels of measurement from a

described research project