|
Hello All,
I am a novice user of SPSS and I want to ask the following questions. 1. How can I code a question asked on semantic differential scale? For example, the question is The customer care representative was... Very Much Somewhat Neither Somewhat Very Much (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) Helpful Unhelpful Friendly Unfriendly Polite rude How should I enter the output of question like the above in the data editor. 2. I suspect that some of my students have filled the questionnaires by themselves instead of going to other people. How can I detect it in SPSS. Will calculating Cronbach alpha help? 3. If value of Cronbach alpha for likert scale item questions is 0.90, can I say that the data is tempered, since it is too repetitious? Thanks a lot for your help. Regards Shoaib ____________________________________________________________________________________Got a little couch potato? Check out fun summer activities for kids. http://search.yahoo.com/search?fr=oni_on_mail&p=summer+activities+for+kids&cs=bz |
|
Shoaib,
You can't get SPSS to detect if students are cheating, and not filling out surveys correctly, but with some deception on your part and a few clever stats tricks you can make them think you can find the surveys they cheated on and hopefully those who did cheat within the class to confess. The procedure you would have to follow is a bit complicated but should work for the most part, first divide the class in to 2 halves and have every student create a sheet with the results of maybe 100 to 200 coin tosses. Have one half make fake results, and have the other half actually do it with a coin. Upon examining the results you should be able to pick out the random tosses done by a coin and the non-random human created results, because people do not often have long strings of 5, 6, 7 or 8 heads or tails in a row. Theese long runs of one particular type are likely to happen if you have a large enough sample of flips the papers done with actual coins will most likely have theese runs. An internet article on theese runs is here: http://everything2.com/index.pl?node_id=774249 Once you have shown the class that you are reliably able to pick out human data from real random data, state that you know some students cheated, and that you will give them the opportunity to redo their work, if they confess. Ask everyone to take out a piece of paper and write down their name and if they cheated or not, and the numbers of the surveys they submitted, (so these ones can be removed from the data) have the students fold the paper in half and pass it up. With any luck, and some good acting skills, you'll probably catch a good proportion of your cheaters. I saw the coin trick successfully executed in one of my stats classes, and it does work about 90% of the time, just enough for you to decieve the students. Additionally, I have TAed a class where the professor caught 2 people cheating on papers, and allowed students who confessed to cheating, through the folded paper method to redo their work. Interestingly 4 students in the class confessed to cheating on their papers. Cheating is rampant among undergrads these days, so a little deception on your part won't be too horrible. I am sorry if my ramblings are not as coherent as they could be, I'm shooting from the hip here, and trying to get this out quickly. Let me and the list know how this works in your class, some other professors might start using this method if it is successful. Don On 5/29/07, shoaib ul-haq <[hidden email]> wrote: > > Hello All, > > I am a novice user of SPSS and I want to ask the > following questions. > > 1. How can I code a question asked on semantic > differential scale? For example, the question is > > The customer care representative was... > Very Much Somewhat Neither Somewhat Very Much > (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) > > Helpful Unhelpful > Friendly Unfriendly > Polite rude > > How should I enter the output of question like the > above in the data editor. > > 2. I suspect that some of my students have filled the > questionnaires by themselves instead of going to other > people. How can I detect it in SPSS. Will calculating > Cronbach alpha help? > > 3. If value of Cronbach alpha for likert scale item > questions is 0.90, can I say that the data is > tempered, since it is too repetitious? > > Thanks a lot for your help. > > Regards > Shoaib > > > > > > > > > > > > ____________________________________________________________________________________Got > a little couch potato? > Check out fun summer activities for kids. > > http://search.yahoo.com/search?fr=oni_on_mail&p=summer+activities+for+kids&cs=bz > |
| Free forum by Nabble | Edit this page |
