Scholar

Kristen Olson

Kristen Marie Olson is an American sociologist and statistician specializing in survey methodology. She is the Leland J. and Dorothy… more

H-index: 25
Political science 28%
Sociology 25%
olsonkm.bsky.social
Yes, that's a great example. Thanks! And contemporary.
olsonkm.bsky.social
Yes, it's a great example! But I'm also interested in other examples of social science (or health) research ethical problems or issues or questions that don't make the "classic" examples list....
olsonkm.bsky.social
I'm teaching a research ethics class for upper division undergraduates this semester. Looking for case study examples of ethical issues that aren't the BIG ones (e.g., Tuskegee, Milgram, Zimbardo) in a digestible form for undergrads (news articles, podcasts, videos, shorter articles).
olsonkm.bsky.social
It was an honor to speak in this memorial session for Don Dillman at #JSM25. Don's influences on the science of surveys are extraordinary. But the primary words that people use to describe him at his memorial are kind, generous, honest, humble, and welcoming - I think he did something extra right.
bradytwest.bsky.social
A word cloud of the responses!

by Brady T. WestReposted by: Kristen Olson

by Brady T. WestReposted by: Kristen Olson

bradytwest.bsky.social
@olsonkm.bsky.social kicks off our session celebrating Don Dillman at #JSM2025 with a discussion of Don’s contributions to survey methodology. Thanks to @statstas.datascience.blue for setting this up! 💯

Reposted by: Kristen Olson

olsonkm.bsky.social
I am teaching an Introduction to Survey Methodology class in the spring (undergrad and grad). Somewhat amazingly, I last taught this class 10 years ago.

What are your favorite textbook and other (podcast, videos, etc.) resources for nascent survey methodologists?

Reposted by: Kristen Olson

jssam.bsky.social
This is the last day of posts from the Univ. of Nebraska-based social media team. We set up the JSSAM social media accounts 4 years ago to spread the word about the great work published in the journal. The account has been managed by editor @olsonkm.bsky.social, Angelica Phillips, & Ryan Doud.
aapor.bsky.social
As you pack your suitcase, wait in security lines, or run into other AAPORites in the Uber line, snap a pic and share your journey to #aapor25!

Reposted by: Kristen Olson

aedwardslevy.bsky.social
A perennial tip for writing about surveys: the base population (who comprises the group that the survey question is talking about?) is SO important.

e.g. a poll finding that X% of "Americans who want to have kids" don't feel financially able to do so is totally different from "X% of all Americans"
rnishimura.bsky.social
🚨 Call for all AAPOR board gamers! 🚨
GAMEPOR is finally officially on the conference schedule, now named "Longitudinal Leisure Study (with board games)".
Bring your favorite (and luggage friendly) board games to the conference and come join us for an epic game night! 🎲
#AAPOR @aapor.bsky.social
olsonkm.bsky.social
I was honored to be the keynote speaker at the #ESRA25 @esrasurvey.bsky.social conference last week in Utrecht. A fantastic conference all around, with great talks on data collection methods, AI, data donation, questionnaire design, and much more.
Me (Kristen Olson) standing in front of my title slide that says "From Mail Surveys to Chatbots: Changes in Survey Modes, Methods, and Data Sources Over Time" at the keynote address at the European Survey Research Association conference in Utrecht
weedenkim.bsky.social
Good news! Release 1 of the 2024 GSS is available for download.

The 2024 GSS, like 2022, uses web, in-person, and phone modes. For some variables this can complicate analyses of trends. See documentation.

Still a prob sample & gold standard survey w/ high resp rates (by contemporary standards).
Get the Data | NORC at the University of Chicago
gss.norc.org

Reposted by: Kristen Olson

kathleenweldon.bsky.social
A scale for the ages. How exactly is one “a little neutral”?
Survey question:


1. How would you express your attitude toward gambling la lot Springa:
(PRESENT CARD "A")

1. I am firmly and morally against it.

2. I am against it, but it's always been there.

3. I am a little neutral on this question.

4. If they want to gamble in Hot Springs I don't mind.

5. I think it is perfectly all right. I am in favor of it.
olsonkm.bsky.social
I give comments to my students of “what’s the denominator?” all the time!This level of precision matters not only for understanding the group about whom one is making inference, but also to suggest whether it’s the whole set of respondents or a subset of them (and all the errors therein).
aedwardslevy.bsky.social
A perennial tip for writing about surveys: the base population (who comprises the group that the survey question is talking about?) is SO important.

e.g. a poll finding that X% of "Americans who want to have kids" don't feel financially able to do so is totally different from "X% of all Americans"

Reposted by: Kristen Olson

conradhackett.bsky.social
If you encounter what seems like an implausible survey finding, ask:
1. Were survey respondents selected randomly or was this an opt-in poll?
2. Could the results, especially for young adults, be driven by bogus respondents?

Keep this post in mind: www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/...
In an experiment, Pew Research Center demonstrated that opt-in and probability-based surveys produced very different results about young adults' views of the Holocaust and abortion.
olsonkm.bsky.social
Looking forward to the #AAPOR25 conference next week!

I will be giving papers on visible incentives in mixed-mode surveys, mode preferences in today’s survey landscape, and using generative AI for reading level calculations of survey questions.
aapor.bsky.social
As you pack your suitcase, wait in security lines, or run into other AAPORites in the Uber line, snap a pic and share your journey to #aapor25!
olsonkm.bsky.social
We have a paper in this Special Issue of @surveypractice.bsky.social! Spanish translation of self-administered surveys in a rural are with higher concentrations of Spanish speakers yielded very few Spanish language completes, but they came from addresses w/a Hispanic surname indicator on ABS frame.
dynarski.bsky.social
Thread of my own work that has used data from Department of Education and columns that have focused on research funded by them

1/N Inequality in college graduation rates
Uses data from Education Longitudinal Study, conducted by Department of Education
www.nytimes.com/2015/06/02/u...
deanarohlinger.bsky.social
Final total for the number of manuscripts received by @sscratsage.bsky.social in 2024? 1,020. Up from 785 submissions in 2023.
dynarski.bsky.social
FANTASTIC

ICPSR at U Mich is coordinating the archiving of at-risk federal data (all of it?)

You can upload data you have & search for data you don’t have

www.datalumos.org/datalumos/
cedr.bsky.social
I do think we should have discussions about how to do education research that is cost effective, but the implicit suggestion that the ED activities are wasteful/fraud is just wrong. Read on if you want concrete examples.

Inexplicable Cuts at the Dept. of Education open.substack.com/pub/goodscie...
Inexplicable Cuts at the Dept. of Education
Recently, DOGE has bragged about terminating 89 contracts worth a collective $881 million at the Institute for Education Sciences at the US Department of Education.
open.substack.com

References

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