Question 1 Report
Before any detailed analysis begins, the first thing to do with the data is to check through the field record book and questionnaires for any??..6??[A. records B. events C. odds D. mistakes], inconsistencies and incompleteness. In some cases, it may be possible to correct any discovered shortcomings. When it is possible to carry out these??..7??[A. plans B. possibilities C. corrections D. expectations].
In most scientific??8?..[A. experiment B. data C. conclusion D. questionnaires] such revisits are clearly impossible. This is true of many surveys too. A road traffic survey??.9??[A. conducted B. experimented C. classified D. precoded] to find out the amount and frequency of daily traffic between two towns cannot be expected to be??..10?..[A. reproducible B. undertaken C. observed D. produced]. There is no way of going back to check whether the number of vehicles reported for any particular hour is correct or not. With open-ended questions the??11?..[A. methods B. responses C. errors D. conclusion] have to be classified into relatively small number of groups. The process of classifying answers and of sometimes identifying them by number and letter is called??.12??.[A. recording B. recoding C. encoding D. coding]. When closed-ended questions are used, it is possible to code all the possible answers before they are actually received. This is called??..13?..[A. precoding B. coding C. encoding D. recoding]. What is done, a check through the answers for proper classification, numbering and lettering is still called for at this stage. This whole process of checking through questionnaires and notebooks is called??14?..[A. editing B. posting C. listing D. auditing]. Collected data will eventually have to be used in drawing??15?..[A. references B. examples C. conclusions D. analogies] and writing a report about the population from which it came.