Newsletters

The Year Ahead for AAPOR

06/06/2016

Welcome from the members of the 2016-2017 Executive Council!  We will have a busy year ahead of us.  Some of the high priority items that Council will be dealing with include:

  1. Figuring out how to improve on the highly successful annual conference in Austin;
  2. Keeping the Transparency Initiative moving forward;
  3. Continuing to cope with the fallout from the FCC’s TCPA ruling;
  4. Providing quick responses to journalists on the performance of the polls during this Presidential year;
  5. Encouraging diversity in all our activities, task forces, and committees;
  6. Partnering with kindred organizations;
  7. Increasing our fund-raising efforts to bolster AAPOR’s finances; and
  8. Improving our service to members.

 
During this year, we will be launching a couple of initiatives that reflect my own personal priorities. 

The first is a task force to try to understand what is happening to the climate for data collection in the United States (and elsewhere) and to identify what steps might be taken to improve it. I hope to include representatives from a wide range of organizations with a shared interest in making things better for surveys.  Among these organizations are the Association of Academic Survey Research Organizations(AASRO), the Council of American Survey Research Organizations (CASRO), the Consortium of Social Science Associations (COSSA), the Council of Professional Associations on Federal Statistics (COPAFS), and others. This is a big issue and it will take a broad and long-term effort to make any headway. This initiative will be co-sponsored by the American Statistical Association (ASA). Peter Miller of the Census Bureau (and a former AAPOR president) has agreed to serve as the AAPOR co-chair for this effort. Many thanks, Peter!!

The second is a task force to look at the issue of data falsification. Within the last few years, there has been a spike in concerns about data falsification, including interviewer falsification of survey data. In addition, new methods (such as computer-assisted recording of interviewers and tracking of interviewers via GPS) for detecting falsification have become available. Many of these new approaches involve statistical methods for detecting seemingly suspicious patterns of data across interviews.

The goal of this task force would be to produce a white paper on data falsification. The paper would review empirical efforts to assess the level of the problem, present brief case studies of highly publicized or highly damaging examples of data falsification (e.g., the Diederik Stapel case), examine and evaluate the various methods currently used for detecting falsification of survey data, and make recommendations regarding best practices for detecting falsification, including traditional ongoing monitoring efforts and more recent methods involving data analytic methods. This task force would also be a joint effort with the ASA. My Westat colleague, Jill DeMatteis, has agreed to serve as AAPOR’s co-chair for this effort. Many thanks to you, Jill!!

Stay tuned as Council and the task forces make progress on these and other issues.