Event Details
Event Title Multi-Item Scale Development Part 1 (Online)
Location Online via Zoom
Sponsor H.W. Odum Institute
Date/Time 10/17/2023 - 10/19/2023 1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
Event Price
Cutoff Date 10/13/2023 Must register before this date
For more information, contact the event administrator: Jill Stevens jill_stevens@unc.edu
Event Presenters
Name Title  
Marcella Boynton Assistant professor in the UNC Division of General Medicine and Clinical Epidemiology, School of Medicine and a biostatistician at UNC NC TraCS Institute
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Part 1 of this course will be offered over two afternoons (10/17/23 and 10/19/23 from 1pm – 5pm US Eastern) via Zoom only. Part 2 of this course will be offered 11/7/23 & 11/9/23 and will require a separate registration.

Attendance is required as the course will not be recorded.

This course is the first is a two-part scale development course series that introduces students to the systematic process of developing multi-item scale measures and survey instruments. Examples include measures of various social and psychological variables that might be assessed in health, medicine, journalism, or other related research areas. After a brief theoretical introduction to topics such as defining a construct and types of validity, we will turn to applied issues such as what is the optimal scale development process and how (and when) can you deviate from that process. We will also address practical issues around questionnaire design such as how to construct a “good” survey instrument that has a natural flow, minimizes participant burden, has appropriate response options and other common concerns in scale development and design. We will focus on real-life examples to demonstrate the scale development process. Although we will briefly discuss the kinds of quantitative techniques that are commonly used in the scale development process, this course will not cover the application of these methods. Quantitative methods for scale development will be covered in Part 2 of this course series.

This course will count as 7.0 CSS short course credits.