Abstract
This paper reports on a study investigating the strengths and weaknesses of questionnaires as software evaluation tools. Two major influences on the usefulness of questionnaire-based evaluation responses are examined: the administration of the questionnaire, and the background and experience of the respondent. Two questionnaires were administered to a large number of students in an introductory programming class. The questionnaires were also given to a group of more experienced users (including course proctors). Respondents were asked to evaluate the text editor used in the class along a number of dimensions; evaluation responses were solicited using a number of different question types. Another group of students received the questionnaire individually, with part of it presented on the computer; a third group also evaluated an enhanced version of the editor in followup sessions.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Root, R. W., & Draper, S. (1983). Questionnaires as a software evaluation tool. In Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems - Proceedings (pp. 83–87). Association for Computing Machinery. https://doi.org/10.1145/800045.801586
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