Users' questions

What are response options?

What are response options?

Response options are the potential answers that you provide to the people taking your survey. Generally, respondents will be asked to choose a single (or best) response to each question you pose, though certainly it makes sense in some cases to instruct respondents to choose multiple response options.

What are some alternative response strategies?

Alternative-Response Design: Structure and Advice

  • Base the item on a single idea.
  • Write items that test an important idea.
  • Avoid lifting statements right from the textbook.
  • Make the questions a brief as possible.
  • Write clearly true or clearly false statements.
  • Eliminate giveaways:

Are open ended questions that enable respondents to reply in their own words?

A closed-ended question is made up of pre-populated answer choices for the respondent to choose from; while an open-ended question asks the respondent to provide feedback in their own words.

Which of the following is a disadvantage of a closed ended question?

Disadvantages of Closed questions in your Course Evaluations: May not have the exact answer the respondent wants to give. Can put ideas into respondents’ minds. Respondents may select answers most similar to true response, even though it is different.

What are the different types of response strategies?

Response methods include natural recovery, mechanical, chemical, and biological treatments; and in-situ burning. When choosing effective response options including natural recovery, you must consider trade-offs affecting the options’

How to use a positive risk response strategy?

As the name suggests, you can use this strategy to increase the Probability (reduce the uncertainty) or the Impact or both associated with a Positive Risk Event. By employing this strategy one of the following 3 things might happen:

When to use avoidance as a risk response strategy?

While this may seem like an attractive option, it’s not always practical. Companies who exercise the avoidance option too much can end up operating well below its risk appetite. However, if there is absolutely zero tolerance for the risk in question, then avoidance is the proper risk response strategy.

Can a risk response strategy change over time?

As explained in the intro, a risk response strategy can change over time. If risk reduction was your initial strategy but the risk suddenly becomes a bigger problem, you can look at either avoiding it, if possible, or transferring it.