I have about 300 cases whereby respondents indicated Familiarity with each
of 10 schools (5-point scale) then they are asked a series of opinion questions for each of the schools (5-point or 7-point scales depending on the question) I would like to compare 3 of the schools based on top 2-box scores. I created a "school score" depending on whether or not the respondent scored the school in the top 2-box for the Familiarity question and this works nicely BUT a respondent could be scored into all of the 3 schools since they were at least familiar with multiple schools: Not mutually exclusive scoring so not a differentiator to do tests of comparison (at least it appears so to me) My question: Does this school scoring sound viable or would another comparison method be more appropriate Hope this is clear? Tks Will ===================== To manage your subscription to SPSSX-L, send a message to [hidden email] (not to SPSSX-L), with no body text except the command. To leave the list, send the command SIGNOFF SPSSX-L For a list of commands to manage subscriptions, send the command INFO REFCARD |
Well, and I thought it was 'reasonably' clear
Thanks Rich, trying again
The bottom line is that this is a basic comparison test of mean
differences between schools A v B v C (see a Table with schools as column
headings and the Likert question means as rows), however, in this case
the column headings aren't mutually exclusive like
age groups or income. School would be the grouping variable in a test like the
independent t-test if mutually exclusive.
There isn't a distinct code for each school it had to be
developed using another question's result (e.g., the Familiar question).
So, in this case, a respondent could be familiar with multiple schools which
voids the mutually exclusive need for the grouping variable.
My questions are: Am I correct in that the column headings be
mutually exclusive? If so, what other test options do I have to compare the
Likert questions between schools given the way I had to create the school
segment.
Tks
From: Rich Ulrich [mailto:[hidden email]] Sent: Saturday, October 22, 2011 12:38 AM To: [hidden email]; SPSS list Subject: RE: Testing Opinions between Schools See comments as inserted -
> Date: Fri, 21 Oct 2011 10:07:39 -0400
> From: [hidden email] > Subject: Testing Opinions between Schools > To: [hidden email] > > I have about 300 cases whereby respondents indicated Familiarity with each > of 10 schools (5-point scale) then they are asked a series of opinion > questions for each of the schools (5-point or 7-point scales depending on > the question) > > I would like to compare 3 of the schools based on top 2-box scores. The sense here is difficult to figure. If you said you wanted to compare "3 of the schools based on Long Island", I would know that this was a selection of schools. If you left out the word "based", I would know you were comparing those scores, even though I don't know what a "top 2-box score" is. > > I created a "school score" depending on whether or not the respondent scored > the school in the top 2-box for the Familiarity question and this works > nicely - please - works nicely to do what? works nicely in what way? Is this 10 scores, one for each school? Does it serve to find 3 schools with a whole lot of ratings? > BUT a respondent could be scored into all of the 3 schools since they > were at least familiar with multiple schools: Not mutually exclusive scoring > so not a differentiator to do tests of comparison (at least it appears so to > me) > > My question: Does this school scoring sound viable or would another > comparison method be more appropriate (a) I can't tell what "this school scoring" is, (b) what it is that you are referring to as a comparison method, and (c) "appropriate" for what? > > Hope this is clear? Nope. And I'm usually pretty good at getting the point. -- Rich Ulrich |
Here is an example of something that is reasonably clear, and
it does describe what you have, as I read between the lines of both messages. If this does not describe what you have, you can try again. There are 300 "cases" with ratings of 10 schools by each rater. This says that you have either 300 respondents rating 10, or 30 respondents rating 10 ... but that is relatively unimportant for now. The raw data looks something like this. Rater School Familiarity score1 to scoreNN 001 AAA 3 < scores to analyze > 001 BBB 4 .. - 10 lines for rater 001; similar for raters 002-030 or 002 to 300. - down to 030 JJJ 5 .. A straightforward analysis that does not take into account familiarity would be a repeated-measures ANOVA on the interesting composite scores created from score1 to scoreNN; or - even - on some of the items. That analysis could use all 10 lines by a rater as one record; or it could be set up as a 2-way design, Rater x School. You propose to use "familiarity" to reduce the file size by excuding every report where that is not high enough. That leaves an unbalanced- blocks design, so probably want to read the 2-5 records for each rater as separate records. Then you do the same 2-way design. You would want to look at and report the means, rather than the raw means. Use *all* the data with high familiarity. If you are only interested in contrasts concerning three of the schools, you can specify those contrasts for particular testing. If you analyze the omitted records in the same way, you have a parallel analysis that reports on something like "popular opinion" of how the schools rate. -- Rich Ulrich From: [hidden email] To: [hidden email] CC: [hidden email] Subject: RE: Testing Opinions between Schools Date: Sat, 22 Oct 2011 08:44:37 -0400 Well, and I thought it was 'reasonably' clear
Thanks Rich, trying again
The bottom line is that this is a basic comparison test of mean
differences between schools A v B v C (see a Table with schools as column
headings and the Likert question means as rows), however, in this case
the column headings aren't mutually exclusive like
age groups or income. School would be the grouping variable in a test like the
independent t-test if mutually exclusive.
There isn't a distinct code for each school it had to be
developed using another question's result (e.g., the Familiar question).
So, in this case, a respondent could be familiar with multiple schools which
voids the mutually exclusive need for the grouping variable.
My questions are: Am I correct in that the column headings be
mutually exclusive? If so, what other test options do I have to compare the
Likert questions between schools given the way I had to create the school
segment.
Tks [snip, previous] |
I will be away at conference Oct 22 through Oct 26. |
In reply to this post by Rich Ulrich
I will be out of the office on Monday, October 24. I will reply to your e-mail after I return on Tuesday, October 25.
Jeff ____________________________ Jeff Allum Research Associate Council of Graduate Schools One Dupont Circle, NW, Suite 230 Washington, DC 20036-1173 (202) 461-3878 (direct) (202) 223-3791 (main) (202) 461-3879 (fax) [hidden email]<mailto:[hidden email]> www.cgsnet.org<http://www.cgsnet.org/> ===================== To manage your subscription to SPSSX-L, send a message to [hidden email] (not to SPSSX-L), with no body text except the command. To leave the list, send the command SIGNOFF SPSSX-L For a list of commands to manage subscriptions, send the command INFO REFCARD |
In reply to this post by Rich Ulrich
Thanks Rich, let me think about this since the schools are not
uniquely identified as a variable as you illustrate
W From: SPSSX(r) Discussion [mailto:[hidden email]] On Behalf Of Rich Ulrich Sent: Saturday, October 22, 2011 7:32 PM To: [hidden email] Subject: Re: Testing Opinions between Schools Here is an example of something that is reasonably clear, and
it does describe what you have, as I read between the lines of both messages. If this does not describe what you have, you can try again. There are 300 "cases" with ratings of 10 schools by each rater. This says that you have either 300 respondents rating 10, or 30 respondents rating 10 ... but that is relatively unimportant for now. The raw data looks something like this. Rater School Familiarity score1 to scoreNN 001 AAA 3 < scores to analyze > 001 BBB 4 .. - 10 lines for rater 001; similar for raters 002-030 or 002 to 300. - down to 030 JJJ 5 .. A straightforward analysis that does not take into account familiarity would be a repeated-measures ANOVA on the interesting composite scores created from score1 to scoreNN; or - even - on some of the items. That analysis could use all 10 lines by a rater as one record; or it could be set up as a 2-way design, Rater x School. You propose to use "familiarity" to reduce the file size by excuding every report where that is not high enough. That leaves an unbalanced- blocks design, so probably want to read the 2-5 records for each rater as separate records. Then you do the same 2-way design. You would want to look at and report the means, rather than the raw means. Use *all* the data with high familiarity. If you are only interested in contrasts concerning three of the schools, you can specify those contrasts for particular testing. If you analyze the omitted records in the same way, you have a parallel analysis that reports on something like "popular opinion" of how the schools rate. -- Rich Ulrich From: [hidden email] To: [hidden email] CC: [hidden email] Subject: RE: Testing Opinions between Schools Date: Sat, 22 Oct 2011 08:44:37 -0400 Well, and I thought it was 'reasonably' clear
Thanks Rich, trying again
The bottom line is that this is a basic comparison test of mean
differences between schools A v B v C (see a Table with schools as column
headings and the Likert question means as rows), however, in this case
the column headings aren't mutually exclusive
like age groups or income. School would be the grouping variable in a test like
the independent t-test if mutually exclusive.
There isn't a distinct code for each school it had to be
developed using another question's result (e.g., the Familiar question).
So, in this case, a respondent could be familiar with multiple schools which
voids the mutually exclusive need for the grouping variable.
My questions are: Am I correct in that the column headings be
mutually exclusive? If so, what other test options do I have to compare the
Likert questions between schools given the way I had to create the school
segment.
Tks [snip, previous]
Will
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