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respondents and revealing attitudes and opinions of a large group of people.
However, it has only an approximate informative value. Therefore, the survey
largely contains only a few specific questions so that it is not too time-
consuming for the respondent.
Questioning is the common characteristic of these methods (techniques). We
can differentiate the following types of questions:
closed
semi-closed (the respondent can articulate the answer on his/her own
next to the offered variants)
open (giving the respondent a free hand to express his/her opinions)
There is a diverse number of closed questions. ‘YES’ or ‘NO’ questions are the
simplest example, but such questions do not capture the content variability of
the possible own opinion. On the other hand, their advantages include the fact
that they do not prefer the average. A certain scale is mostly used where the
respondent is permitted to choose only one of the answers. For instance:
As for
the
planned career rules, I am: very satisfied – rather satisfied – rather
unsatisfied – absolutely unsatisfied – I have another opinion.
The questionnaire can be given either in person, over mediators (e.g.
class
teachers) or by mail. In case of surveys, survey sheets can also be freely
available on tables in various institutions, markets, etc., or are disseminated by
the media. (For
details on explorative methods, see Gavora, Pelikán).
Content analysis of text
This is a vital source of information in education research. Most frequently, it
involves:
analysis of
personal documentation
analysis of
school documentation (or
of documentation of other
educational facilities, e.g. school rules)
analysis of
school indicators (e.g. outcomes of practical activities, school
websites, themes of bachelor’s theses)
The first case provides information about the pupil/learner/child and eventually
also about the teacher/educator. The second case may include documents such
as various regulations, decrees, school plans and rules (of the given facility),
minutes of various meetings, inspection reports. The third group of documents
may include school
grades and results of learners, absence at school, etc.
Analysis can be performed from the
quantitative perspective (if the phenomena
subject to analysis are measurable, e.g. number of events, participation, etc.)
and from the
qualitative perspective (we analyse the content). (For details on
this method, see Gavora, Pelikán)
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Observation
The observation method primarily includes the observation of respondents’
activities in a planned, systematic and goal-directed manner (unlike
the usual
observation activities in classroom). A record (report) is maintained about
observation. There is a difference between
evident
observation where the
observer is known and seen,
hidden observation (most frequently with a
camera) and
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