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Open-ended course evaluations: a response rate problem?

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journal contribution
posted on 2007-07-10, 13:07 authored by Jenny A. Darby
Purpose - This study examines participant’s response rate on dual style training course evaluation forms. These combine structured and open ended formats. Pencil and paper forms have a long history of use by trainers in business and commerce and more recently in education. Research methods texts tend to have neglected the issue of response rates with this type of form. Design/methodology/approach - Approximately 2000 course participants attending 28 courses completed evaluation forms. These were designed with a series of structured responses scales followed by a section for open ended comments. Findings – It was found the completion rate for the open ended sections was low and thus validity was suspect. Various explanations were offered for this. Subsequently when a redesigned evaluation form was administered to a further 1641 course participants it was found response rates increased dramatically when open ended sections were placed earlier in the questionnaire. Practical implications – Indicates ways in which course evaluation forms can be redesigned to increase response rates for open ended sections and thus improve the validity of any findings. Originality/value – Provides information about response rates neglected by most methodology texts concerning the design of training evaluation questionnaires which include open ended sections.

History

School

  • Social Sciences

Department

  • Communication, Media, Social and Policy Studies

Citation

Darby, J.A., 2007. Open-ended course evaluations: a response rate problem? Journal of European Industrial Training, 31(5), pp. 402-412

Publisher

© Emerald

Publication date

2007

Notes

This article was published in the journal, Journal of European Industrial Training [© Emerald]. The definitive version is available at: www.emeraldinsight.com/0309-0590.htm.

ISSN

0309-0590

Language

  • en