Survey Development
Qualitative Methods
Field Observation
Agency Records and Secondary Data
Evaluation Research and Problem Analysis
100

These are the two main forms of survey questions.

What are "open-ended" and "close-ended"?

100

A technique commonly used in marketing AND criminal justice includes asking questions to 6-12 participants at once.

What is the "focus group"?

100

This type of researcher identifies themselves as a researcher but still interacts directly with observed participants.

What is "observer-as-participant"?

100

This type of data does not require direct interaction with the participants on which the dataset is based.

What is "secondary data" or "agency data"?

100

This type of research is used to help design alternative practices from what is currently being used.

What is "policy analysis"?

200

When writing survey questions, avoid THIS type of statement that ask about the opposite of the issue of interest (ex. Should marijuana NOT be legalized?).

What are "negative" or "double negative" questions.

200

T/F: Qualitative interviews allow for "rich descriptions" of the human experience.

What is "true"?

200

Researchers who wish only to be known as another community member (hide their research agenda) are known as this.

What is a "full participant"?

200

THIS is the analysis of social artifacts such as written documents, social media posts, newspapers, etc.

What is "content analysis"?

200

These are individuals who have a vested interest in an organization and the outcomes of any evaluation research.

What are "stakeholders"?

300

When you want questions to only appear to certain participants based on their previous answers, you would use THIS type of question.

What are "contingency questions"?

300

THIS refers to one's own subjectivity in the research process that is impacted by one's own feelings and prior experiences.

What is "reflexivity"?

300

This form of field observation involves a careful inventory of environmental and situational factors that may contribute to crime or dangerousness.

What is a "safety audit"?

300

Chances of clerical errors increase as the dataset gets ______.

What is "larger"?

300

In evaluation research, the outcomes of interest represent THIS type of variable.

What is the "dependent variable"?

400

Follow up reminders about surveys will ________ the response rate.

What is "increase"?

400

_____ Theory is an inductive approach in which theory is established from the data and analysis of meaning.

What is "grounded theory"?

400

Most forms of qualitative research utilize this form of sampling.

What is "nonprobability" or "purposive" sampling?

400

Annual, publicly available data, such as the UCR/NIBRS is a form of THIS.

What are "published statistics"?

400

THIS type of research is meant to link the intended goals of a criminal justice policy to empirical evidence that supports it having the desired effect.

What is "program evaluation"?

500

When writing survey questions, be aware of THIS, where participants may adjust their responses based on what they belief they want the researcher to hear.

What is "social desirability bias"?

500

THESE are important tools for qualitative researchers that are used to encourage participants to elaborate further.

What are "probes"?

500

Structured field observation forms allow multiple researchers to gather the same data. These forms typically allow for ______ measures.

What are "quantitative" or "numerical" measures?

500

In content analysis, THIS represents the underlying meaning that can be discovered through interpretative process.

What is "latent content"?

500

T/F: Evaluation research may only use experimental designs.

What is "false"?

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