Usability Evaluation of Computer Assisted Survey Instruments

Computer-assisted interviewing (CAI) has a substantial impact on the way interviewers carry out the task of interviewing. Survey instruments are becoming more complex, necessitating new skills of interviewers. In addition to question wording, the design of CAI instruments is a focus of evaluation and pretesting efforts. This article reports on a variety of research activities… Continue reading Usability Evaluation of Computer Assisted Survey Instruments

The Application of Cognitive Science to Computer Assisted Interviewing

The Promises and Perils of Web Surveys

Technology trends in survey data collection

Internet Surveys

Designing a Strategy for Reducing No Opinion Responses in Web-Based Surveys

The Effects of Family Background on Earnings

Work History, Labor Force Attachment, and Earnings Differences between the Races and Sexes

This article uses a new data set to investigate the extent to which differences in work history, on-the-job training, absenteeism, and self-imposed restrictions on work hours and location account for wage differences between the sexes and races. As expected, white men generally had more education and training and less absenteeism and fewer restrictions than black… Continue reading Work History, Labor Force Attachment, and Earnings Differences between the Races and Sexes

The Dynamics of Childhood Poverty

Child poverty rates have remained high since the middle of the 1970s. While several trends, including declines in the number of children per family and increases in parental years of schooling, worked to reduce child poverty rates, several others, including slow economic growth, widening economic inequality, and increases in the proportion of children living in… Continue reading The Dynamics of Childhood Poverty

The Structure of Female Wages