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AuthorWittrock, Jill
AuthorKimmel, Linda
AuthorHunscher, Brian
AuthorLe, Kien Trung
Available date2018-02-20T07:57:52Z
Publication Date2017-11-02
Publication NameInternational Journal of Social Research Methodology
Identifierhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13645579.2017.1301078
CitationJill Wittrock, Linda Kimmel, Brian Hunscher & Kien Trung Le (2017) Proxy reporting in education surveys: factors influencing accurate reporting in the 2012 Qatar Education Study, International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 20:6, 737-748, DOI: 10.1080/13645579.2017.1301078
ISSN1364-5579
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/10576/6405
AbstractProxy reporting is a common practice during survey data collection to increase response rates while reducing fieldwork costs, and agreement between proxies and self-reports is critical to make reliable and valid inferences. This study is the first to unpack what influences proxy accuracy in a non-Western setting using data from the 2012 Qatar Education Study. We find that agreement is a function of a student’s grade in school, grades, a parent’s level of education, and the interaction between immigration status and parent education. These findings suggest in multicultural contexts, agreement may vary based on factors beyond what is typically accounted when examining the components of reporting error as a result of using proxies over self-reports.
Languageen
PublisherTaylor & Francis (Routledge)
Subjectcross-cultural survey design
immigration
measurement error
Middle East and North Africa
Proxy reporting
TitleProxy reporting in education surveys: factors influencing accurate reporting in the 2012 Qatar Education Study
TypeArticle
Pagination737-748
Issue Number6
Volume Number20
ESSN1464-5300


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