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Survey Analysis and Reporting in the Cloud

Frequencies
Created by jdeboel on 10/26/2010 9:37:40 AM

See the frequencies of for the responses to a single question in a frequency table and a graph.
Drill down on one result, and find out interesting conclusions using an independent variable.


www.reportingrobots.com/sa2 > Survey Analyser > Question Level > Frequencies > Questions

With the “Frequencies > Questions” analysis, you can show graphs for each facet and/or question. Select the desired facet, concept and question and your graphs will appear.

You can change the graph properties using the context menu. (right mouse button)

Graphs for split variables (or independent variable) can be found under “Survey Analyser » Sample Results » Frequencies”.

Questions Frequencies analysis

www.reportingrobots.com/sa2 > Survey Analyser > Question Level > Frequencies > Drill Down


Answer drill down

At the top of the page, firstly select your desired concept, facet, question and item code; and then select the split variable (or independent variable) you want to show in the graphic. The requested graph will appear.

You can change the graph properties by using the context menu. (right mouse button)

Below the graph you can find a table that shows a response count for the selected question item code and the selected split variable.

 An example:
A course satisfaction study (see “DEMO” dataset) is set up by a university to find out what students think about the quality of the education the school offers.

When analysing the results using drill down, the researcher asks himself: “The students that said they are generally very dissatisfied with the school, how much did they even attend the classes?”

In the “Frequencies > Drill down” analyser, the researcher chooses “Global satisfaction” as concept and he selects “Very dissatisfied” as an item code. After this he selects “participation” as a split variable.

The graph appears and the researcher concludes that 54% of the very dissatisfied students gave themselves less than a 50% score in participation. 36% even gave themselves less than 25%. The researcher can safely say that the very dissatisfied students mainly are the students that didn’t attend the classes very much. So this adds somewhat of a nuance to a possibly negative result for global satisfaction.

Below the graph the researcher notices that there are 25 respondents that replied they are “very dissatisfied”.
In “Survey Analyser » Question Level » Lists » Frequency Tables”, next to the question “(Q25) Your general rating compared to other courses” he can see there were a total of 1000 valid responses for this question
Drill down frequencies
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