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Felderer, Barbara; Herzing, Jessica M. E. – Field Methods, 2023
Even though the proportion of individuals who are not equipped to participate in online surveys is constantly decreasing, many surveys face an under-representation of individuals who do not feel IT literate enough to participate. Using experimental data from a probability-based online panel, we study which recruitment survey mode strategy performs…
Descriptors: Online Surveys, Technological Literacy, Information Technology, Participation
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Shanafelt, Amy; Sadeghzadeh, Claire; Chapman, Leah; De Marco, Molly; Harnack, Lisa; Gust, Susan; Jackson, Melvin; Caspi, Caitlin – Field Methods, 2021
Natural experiments are often used for answering research questions in which randomization is implausible. Effective recruitment strategies are well documented for observational cohort studies and clinical trials, unlike recruitment methods for time-sensitive natural experiments. In this time-sensitive study of the impact of a minimum wage policy,…
Descriptors: Low Income Groups, Recruitment, Minimum Wage, Experiments
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Aline Duvoisin; Jan-Erik Refle; Claudine Burton-Jeangros; Liala Consoli; Julien Fakhoury; Yves Jackson – Field Methods, 2024
Conducting research among hard-to-reach populations is a difficult endeavor because some of their characteristics are known to be associated with survey nonresponse and panel attrition. In the case of the Parchemins study, which followed undocumented migrants over their process of regularization and during the first years of regularized life in…
Descriptors: Recruitment, Attrition (Research Studies), Surveys, Longitudinal Studies
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Anais Roque; Amber Wutich; Alexandra Brewis; Melissa Beresford; Laura Landes; Olga Morales-Pate; Ramon Lucero; Wendy Jepson; Yushiou Tsai; Michael Hanemann – Field Methods, 2024
Community-based participant-observation purposefully combines participant-observation and community-based participatory research. While participant-observation is the core method of ethnography and foundational to cultural anthropology, community-based participatory research initially emerged from health and related applied sciences to align…
Descriptors: Participant Observation, Participatory Research, Ethnography, Communities of Practice
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Gibbs, Jeremy J.; Traube, Dorian E.; Goldbach, Jeremy T. – Field Methods, 2022
Because of the high cost, venue-based probability sampling of young men who have sex with men (YMSM) is largely inaccessible to social researchers. The aim of this study is to compare the feasibility of implementing geosocial networking application-based (GSNA) and venue-based probability sampling of young men who have sex with men. A…
Descriptors: Young Adults, Males, Homosexuality, Feasibility Studies
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López, Daniel Jacobson; García, Antonio; Engel, Rafael; Jackson, John L., Jr. – Field Methods, 2023
There is a paucity of empirical literature examining the experiences of gay Latino sexual assault survivors in the United States, due in part because there is little research focused on how to effectively recruit and engage Latino sexual assault survivors as participants in the research process. While researchers have utilized various recruitment…
Descriptors: Males, Hispanic Americans, Sexual Abuse, Homosexuality
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Leech, Tamara G. J.; Irby-Shasanmi, Amy; Sow, Hadya – Field Methods, 2019
We conducted a study about three common recruitment and retention obstacles facing scholars interested in racial disparities research: potential mistrust from the black community, a stigmatized research topic, and high participation burden. Nonetheless, we successfully recruited and retained 28 young black men in a three-month study of violence.…
Descriptors: Racial Bias, Racial Differences, African Americans, Recruitment
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Kelly, Bridget; Margolis, Marjorie; McCormack, Lauren; LeBaron, Patricia A.; Chowdhury, Dhuly – Field Methods, 2017
The literature on factors that influence participation in qualitative research is lacking. We conducted an experiment with a nationally representative sample to test the impact of different incentive types and amounts on willingness to participate in a hypothetical qualitative interview. We randomized participants from an online panel to one of…
Descriptors: Participant Characteristics, Qualitative Research, Incentives, Comparative Analysis
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Garvey, Rick; Pedersen, Eric R.; D'Amico, Elizabeth J.; Ewing, Brett A.; Tucker, Joan S. – Field Methods, 2018
Conducting intervention studies with homeless populations can be difficult, particularly in terms of retaining participants across multiple sessions and locating them for subsequent follow-up assessments. Homeless youth are even more challenging to engage due to substance use, mental health problems, wariness of authority figures, and frequent…
Descriptors: Homeless People, Youth, Youth Problems, Substance Abuse
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Antoun, Christopher; Zhang, Chan; Conrad, Frederick G.; Schober, Michael F. – Field Methods, 2016
The rise of social media websites (e.g., Facebook) and online services such as Google AdWords and Amazon Mechanical Turk (MTurk) offers new opportunities for researchers to recruit study participants. Although researchers have started to use these emerging methods, little is known about how they perform in terms of cost efficiency and, more…
Descriptors: Social Media, Web Sites, Recruitment, Users (Information)
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Moosa, Sheena; Koopman-Boyden, Peggy – Field Methods, 2016
Representing isolated small island communities through social survey research continues to be challenging. We examine a locally developed method to reach and recruit older people (65+ years) for a survey on well-being in the small island developing state of Maldives. The use of messengers to recruit participants is examined in the context of these…
Descriptors: Developing Nations, Social Science Research, Recruitment, Participant Characteristics
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Park, Hyunjoo; Sha, M. Mandy; Willis, Gordon – Field Methods, 2016
When recruiting respondents for cognitive interviews testing translated survey questionnaires, researchers often recommend interviewing monolingual non-English speakers because they are the likely users of the translations. However, these individuals are hard to recruit, and there is no standard definition of monolingual. Using cognitive interview…
Descriptors: Surveys, Questionnaires, Translation, Monolingualism
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Sikkens, Elga; van San, Marion; Sieckelinck, Stijn; Boeije, Hennie; de Winter, Micha – Field Methods, 2017
Social media are useful facilitators when recruiting hidden populations for research. In our research on youth and radicalization, we were able to find and contact young people with extreme ideals through Facebook. In this article, we discuss our experiences using Facebook as a tool for finding respondents who do not trust researchers. Facebook…
Descriptors: Social Media, Qualitative Research, Participant Characteristics, Recruitment
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Blom, Annelies G.; Gathmann, Christina; Krieger, Ulrich – Field Methods, 2015
This article looks into the processes and outcomes of setting up and maintaining a probability-based longitudinal online survey, which is recruited face-to-face and representative of both the online and the offline population aged 16-75 in Germany. This German Internet Panel studies political and economic attitudes and reform preferences through…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Online Surveys, Longitudinal Studies, Probability