cover image: Campus Climate Surveys of Sexual Misconduct: Limiting the Risk of Nonresponse Bias

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Campus Climate Surveys of Sexual Misconduct: Limiting the Risk of Nonresponse Bias

12 Feb 2018

We also compare the costs of adding the second phase design to the costs of increasing the individual incentives. [...] Due to the expected high costs of telephone and face-to-face contacts employed, Phase 2 of the survey chose a random sample of the nonrespondents who remained at the close of Phase 1. [...] The high overall response rate is a product of combining each of the steps described above, but two of those elements are particularly expensive – the individual incentives and the work of trained interviewers. [...] In our last set of analyses we assess the impact of both the incentive level and the two-phase survey design on the key summary measures of each of these types of sexual misconduct. [...] Nevertheless, comparison of a random assignment experiment on incentive level and the two-phase design, which used interviewer-assisted recruitment of a random subsample of nonresponding students, reveals that the expense of the second phase generated a bigger improvement in the response rate than the higher incentive, and the costs of interviewer effort can be affordable.

Authors

William Axinn, James Wagner, Mick Couper, and Scott Crawford

Pages
23
Published in
United States of America

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