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Data Collection Mode and Social Desirability Bias in Self-Reported Religious Attendance
443
Citations
11
References
1998
Year
EngineeringSocial Desirability BiasSocial PsychologyReligiositySocial InfluenceSocial Determinants Of HealthSocial SciencesData Collection ModeReligious PrejudiceBiasSelf-reported Religious AttendanceReligious GroupSocial ImpactWeekly Religious AttendanceReligious AttendanceSociologyQuantitative Social Science ResearchWeekly AttendanceSurvey Methodology
Compared to conventional interviewer-administered questions about attendance at religious services, self-administered items and time-use items should minimize social desirability pressures. In fact, they each reduce claims of weekly religious attendance by about one-third. This difference in measurement approach does not generally affect associations between attendance and demographic characteristics. It does, however, alter the observed trend in religious attendance over time : in contrast to the almost constant attendance rate recorded by conventional interviewer-administered items, approaches minimizing social desirability bias reveal that weekly attendance has declined continuously over the past three decades. These results provide support for the hypothesis that America has become more secularized, and they demonstrate the role of mode of administration in reducing measurement error
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