Sentences with phrase «paid survey respondents»

That is, the data used in the study suspiciously match another data set entirely; the prestigious gay - rights research institute at the grad student's university says it did not fund any survey effort as he claimed it did; the student admits to having no such funding and to not having paid survey respondents as he claimed; the private firm allegedly employed to collect survey data says it has never heard of him or his study.

Not exact matches

A 2017 survey from the air travel site Airfwarewatchdog found that a little over half of respondents believe families with children aged 10 and under should have to sit in a designated section apart from other passengers, and the idea of separating children and adults has gained traction on Reddit, where threads with titles like «Would you pay extra for a child - free flight?
In fact, 30 percent of more than 2,600 respondents to a 2015 FlexJobs survey said they would take a 10 or even 20 percent cut in pay for flexible work options.
To be considered «Unemployed» a survey respondent must not have done any work for pay during a particular week of the survey month, must be available for work, and — most crucially — must have done something to find a job during the last four weeks.
The CNBC / SurveyMonkey Small Business Survey found that when asked what they were most likely to do with extra money received from a tax cut next year, the No. 1 response from small - business owners was «pay down debt,» chosen by 31 percent of respondents.
In fact, when given a choice between paying someone with cash or with an app, the survey found 47 percent of respondents would choose the digital option.
According to the Capital One Rewards Barometer, a quarterly survey of U.S. consumers, half of respondents planning summer trips will pay at least some of their travel expenses using rewards, compared with 42 percent last year.
Forty percent of survey respondents blamed «day - to - day decisions» that essentially pay the bill, but undermine our stated strategy to change.»
Cost savings: In addition to real estate savings with full - time remote workers, 20 percent of survey respondents would take a 10 percent pay cut for flexible work options.
A survey of New York City employers after implementation of the city's paid sick days law showed that more than 91 percent of respondents did not reduce hiring; 97 percent did not reduce hours; and 94 percent did not raise prices as a result of the law.26 In a similar study from Connecticut, which passed a statewide paid sick days law in 2011, employers also reported no effects or modest effects to their bottom lines.27 And an audit of the District of Columbia's paid sick leave law, effective in 2008, found that it did not discourage business owners from basing their businesses in the District, nor did it incentivize them to relocate their businesses outside of Washington.28
«I was doing the project for free, I didn't have money to go get a lawyer,» Kogan said, noting that the approximately $ 800,000 that Cambridge Analytica paid his company was used to pay for the $ 3 or $ 4 rewards that survey respondents got for participating.
Of those UK respondents with a pension plan, the survey uncovered that 24 % were unsure what to do with their pension savings at retirement after paying off any debts, while 20 % planned to take pension cash and bank it — or have already.
However, the latest «Voice of Small Business» panel survey has shown that 18 per cent of respondents are still being paid late by the public sector.
Fifty - two percent of respondents said they received a refund, with 64 percent planning to use the money to pay bills, the survey found.
Surprisingly, the respondents said that it made little difference: they believed their chances of being treated fairly were as good or better online as they were off - line (although Horton paid his Mechanical Turk respondents a good rate to complete his survey which may have influenced their answers).
Half of the respondents surveyed gave their reasons for this, saying they believe more people are looking for commitment on paid dating sites, compared to the more casual nature of most dating app users.
Only 38 percent of the respondents to our survey report paying «a great deal» or «quite a bit» of attention to education issues.
On three topics — merit pay, charter schools, and school vouchers — one group of survey respondents was asked its opinion without any special prompt.
The survey — which included 1200 respondents from a number of countries where this has increasingly become a problem — reveals this new hazardous wasteland trend is in - part the result of cheap tents — 46 % surveyed paid less than # 75, and 60 % said they left their tent because it was broken.
A new NPR / Ipsos poll finds that just 1 in 4 Americans believe teachers in this country are paid fairly, but other surveys have found that when respondents are told what teachers currently earn, support for raising salaries drops.
To assess public support for this policy, commonly known as merit pay, the survey asked respondents in 2009 whether they favored «basing a teacher's salary, in part, on students» academic progress on state tests.»
By a wide margin, survey respondents oppose requirements to balance discipline rates across racial and ethnic groups, and a plurality of the public opposes requirements that teachers pay fees to cover collective bargaining costs even if they do not join the teachers union.
Consumers are very interested in «bundling» print and digital versions of a book, with 48 % of survey respondents willing to pay more for bundles.
The earlier report pointed out that millennials are not consuming print newspapers in anywhere near the numbers the industry once saw, and that more than half of the 1000 + survey respondents didn't pay for any type of news, digital or otherwise.
In that range, 50 % of survey respondents say they have paid the price occasionally for newly released titles.
In a 2015 consumer survey, over half of respondents indicated that they only wish to have the print copy, 22.5 % of respondents say that they would pick one print book over another if it came with a copy of the ebook, and 11.2 % would pay a slightly higher price to get both.
Many respondents to a July AAII survey said they were favoring dividend - paying stocks over pure growth or value stocks.
Indeed, 58.6 % of survey respondents worry about earning enough money to pay off their debt.
In our survey, respondents told us they are more likely to pay better attention when texting than when they talk on the phone.
Especially since 60 % of the survey respondents reported dipping into savings to pay monthly expenses in the past five years.
But our recent CreditDonkey.com survey found that while 59.9 % of the more than 1,100 respondents live paycheck to paycheck, a higher percentage — 68.4 % — are parents with children and other family members who are dependent on a paycheck that needs to stretch until the next pay cycle.
In that survey, 33 percent of respondents said they'd be putting their rewards points to use to help pay for their summer vacation.
The TD survey indicates that only 10 percent of respondents expect to pay for their checking accounts.
The survey released Wednesday by the Canadian Payroll Association found that 48 per cent of respondents said they rely on each payday to cover their bills, with 40 per cent admitting they spend an amount equal to all or more of their net pay each week.
In a recent survey by the Federal Reserve, nearly 1 in 5 respondents said they would pay for a $ 400 emergency expense with a credit card, and carry a balance.
In our recent tax survey, of the respondents who use their credit cards to pay taxes, 86 % said they would pay off the balance within one billing cycle, which is the way to go.
Even though 33.1 % of respondents said they were able to shave an average of 10 % off the purchase price by haggling, they would still rather pay more than go through the trouble, according to our survey.
744 survey respondents answered the question «How long do you usually take to pay off your credit card bills from holiday purchases?»
Interestingly, one - third of the survey's younger respondents (aged 18 to 34) are willing to pay to protect their retirement assets from volatility, compared to 26 percent overall.
Almost 77 % of the survey respondents who think they'll owe money to the IRS plan to settle that bill with a single cash payment, even though 60.1 % are aware of the installment options for tax payments and 52.1 % realize they could pay with a credit card.
According to a survey on marriage and debt by the National Foundation for Credit Counseling, 37 percent of respondents said they wouldn't marry someone until their debt was paid off.
13 percent pay for vacation with rewards The CreditCards.com scientific telephone survey of 1,003 U.S. adults (see methodology) also found that a surprisingly high number of respondents were planning to use rewards card points or miles to pay for their vacation: 13 percent.
On average, survey respondents graduated with nearly $ 40,000 in debt and still have about $ 30,000 left to pay off of the loan.
A survey by Ambassador Real Estate when marketing a project found that most potential homebuyers have no idea what green building means: 86 percent of the respondents rejected the idea of paying more for such an apartment.
In examining the claim justifying a disproportionate ration of liberals to conservative, the claim being conservatives are less interested in becoming professors than liberal students because they seek out higher paying jobs where liberal students are more likely to seek out community or service oriented, of which they believe higher education to such a thing; the survey found, however, while conservative students were more likely to complain about the price of higher education they were just as likely to express an interest in higher education and it was liberal respondents who ranked salary more highly than conservatives.
It is also important to note concerns around perceptions of liability for bike share, as over a third of all survey respondents thought that they might have to pay for a bike if something happened to it.
When asked what they would spend (or did spend) their first pay packet on, almost a quarter (24 %) of those surveyed said a luxury item, while an equal number of respondents said they would use the money to pay off student debt.
These numbers are consistent with results from the 2006 AmLaw Midlevel Law Firm Associates Survey we summarized in an August 2006 post in which 45 % of respondents stated that they would take a 25 percent pay cut in exchange for a 25 percent cut in the billable hours requirement.
Many other survey respondents flagged that pro bono clients can be just as demanding as those who are paying for legal services, and in some cases more so.
Coinsurance (the percentage of costs paid by a patient after paying their deductible) was the term least understood by survey respondents.
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