The trick is to ask
the right questions in your survey, to get honest and unbiased feedback.
Not exact matches
School prayer and abortion — the items highlighted
in the
survey — are comfortably within the realm of family values, but they are something else, too:
questions closely allied to the First and Fourteenth Amendments, to civil
rights as much as to family values, and, above all, to the nature of the relationship between the individual and the Creator who, as our Declaration states, endows each one of us with every
right that matters.
To measure the ideological position of the different groups,
survey instruments usually carry a
question asking respondents on where they see themselves
in a left to
right scale.
«I've studied
survey research since I was
in graduate school some 40 years ago,» Peterson says, «and the first thing you learn is that there is no
right way to ask a
question.»
The U.S. Department of Education's office for civil
rights will likely require schools to report results for 10 new
survey questions beginning
in fall 2014.
«Only recently have many policymakers and practitioners come to recognize that when asked the
right questions,
in the
right ways students can be an important source of information on the quality of teaching and the learning environment
in individual classrooms,» reads the introduction to the MET brief on student
surveys.
Something is going on
in this
survey behind the top line figures, I suspect that respondents are trotting out the «
right» answers to the ** motherhood **
questions like «Global warming has been happening» but giving some more thought to those
questions that require a more measured PERSONAL response.
Sam, since today's conversation is about access to justice and potentially advocating for a civil
right to counsel, we thought it would be interesting to kind of check the pulse of our listeners and see both how they feel about the concept of creating a civil
right to counsel, and also about kind of what their commitment to access to justice and pro bono work is, and so we created a really simple two
question survey in the show notes for today's podcast episodes.