Essentials of Questionnaire Designing: A Review
Sonali V. Mahajan
Department of Prosthodontics and Crown and Bridge, Government Dental College and Hospital, Chhatrapati Sambhajinagar, Maharashtra, India.
Smita A. Khalikar
Department of Prosthodontics and Crown and Bridge, Government Dental College and Hospital, Chhatrapati Sambhajinagar, Maharashtra, India.
Kishor M. Mahale
Department of Prosthodontics and Crown and Bridge, Government Dental College and Hospital, Chhatrapati Sambhajinagar, Maharashtra, India.
Vishal A. Mahajan
Department of Conservative Dentistry and Endodontics, Yashwantrao Chavan Dental College, Ahmednagar, Maharashtra, India.
Payal P. Rewale *
Department of Prosthodontics and Crown and Bridge, Government Dental College and Hospital, Chhatrapati Sambhajinagar, Maharashtra, India.
*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Abstract
Background: Questionnaires are indispensable research tools in health sciences, social sciences, and behavioural research for collecting standardised quantitative and qualitative data. The validity of research outcomes is profoundly influenced by the questionnaire’s design. Poorly constructed instruments can lead to biased responses, low reliability, poor response rates, and invalid conclusions. Therefore, a thorough understanding of design principles is critical for generating credible, meaningful research findings.
Aim: To comprehensively review and synthesise the essential principles, methodological steps, and best practices for designing valid and reliable questionnaires for research purposes.
Methods: This narrative review consolidates information from standard research methodology literature and authoritative sources on questionnaire development. Key aspects reviewed include conceptual framework formulation, types of questions, scaling techniques, wording principles, translation and back-translation, question sequencing, formatting, modes of administration, pilot testing, and the assessment of reliability and validity. Ethical considerations are also discussed.
Results: Effective questionnaire design requires a systematic approach, beginning with a clear alignment with research objectives. Clarity of wording, logical sequencing, and appropriate selection of question types and scaling methods are fundamental. Pilot testing is crucial for identifying ambiguities and refining the instrument. Reliability can be ensured through test-retest analysis and internal consistency measures, while validity assessment confirms the instrument measures its intended constructs. Proper formatting, selection of administration mode, and ethical safeguards significantly enhance response rates and data quality.
Conclusion: Questionnaire design is an iterative methodological process that requires conceptual clarity, careful wording, practical feasibility and ethical safeguards. Rigorous development and validation strengthen the accuracy, reproducibility and usefulness of questionnaire-based research.
Keywords: Questionnaire design, survey methodology, research instruments, question wording, pilot testing, reliability, validity, data quality, ethical considerations, questionnaire administration.