On Mon, Dec 16, 2013 at 2:55 PM, Gregory Zobel <[email protected]> wrote:
> On the final question--permission to use data--perhaps we only have Yes or
> No and leave the answer No as marked/default. That way, if the user wants
> to share their data, they can change it to yes.
>

It is possible to have this be neutral, neither yes nor no filled in,
and make it a mandatory question.  That way they use needs to decide
one way or another before submitting.

> As it sits, having the third option confused me a bit as I went through.
>
> Best,
> gz
>
>
> On Mon, Dec 16, 2013 at 11:53 AM, Regina Henschel
> <[email protected]>wrote:
>
>> Hi Rob,
>>
>> Rob Weir schrieb:
>>
>>> On Mon, Dec 16, 2013 at 11:55 AM, Regina Henschel
>>> <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>
>>>> Hi Rob,
>>>>
>>>> Rob Weir schrieb:
>>>>
>>>>  Here is a draft of the survey set up in LimeSurvey:
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> http://survey.openoffice.org/index.php/survey/index/sid/
>>>>> 522696/newtest/Y/lang/en
>>>>>
>>>>> Let's double check the question wording, the choices, etc.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>> Word "Industry" in demographic question "Industry in which you work" is
>>>> not
>>>> clear. The answer has "Industry" too and answer "Education" is not a
>>>> "Industry" for me.
>>>>
>>>> The word "Entrepreneur" is likely unknown to not native speakers.
>>>>
>>>> I have run through the survey, and on the last page I get the "Submit"
>>>> button, but the progress bar is not at 100%.
>>>>
>>>>
>>> It is not really complete until you submit the response for that last
>>> "data consent" question.   If this is confusing I can hide the
>>> progress bar.
>>>
>>
>> Yes, in the given way it is confusing.
>>
>> Is it possible to show all the titles in one line with arrow or > sign
>> between and emphasis the current title?
>>
>>
>>
>>>  The survey has no "back" and back button from browser does not work.
>>>>
>>>>
>>> OK.  I added a "previous" button.
>>>
>>
>> That works and is much better.
>>
>>
>>
>>>  The questions on the first side sound very similar, for example
>>>> "easy to use"
>>>> "need the support"
>>>> "cumbersome to use"
>>>> And if this is intended, the questions should not be near together.
>>>>
>>>> Giving five answers will lead to an overemphasis of the three answers in
>>>> the
>>>> middle. http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tendenz_zur_Mitte (sorry, I've no
>>>> English article)
>>>>
>>>>
>>> It is not the way I'd design a new survey, certainly, but this is a
>>> standard set of questions and options that has been around for quite a
>>> while, in the usability field, so following this same design will give
>>> us answers we can compare to industry averages, etc..
>>>
>>> See:
>>>
>>> http://www.measuringusability.com/sus.php
>>>
>>
>> I see, your design is well-founded. Again learned something.
>>
>>
>> Kind regards
>> Regina
>>
>>
>>
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>
>
> --
> ---
> Gregory B. Zobel, Ph.D.
> Assistant Professor of Educational Technology
> MSEd Program Coordinator
>
> Western Oregon University
> 345 N. Monmouth Ave
> Monmouth, OR 97361

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