21.06.2014 Views

Questionnaire Dwelling Unit-Level and Person Pair-Level Sampling ...

Questionnaire Dwelling Unit-Level and Person Pair-Level Sampling ...

Questionnaire Dwelling Unit-Level and Person Pair-Level Sampling ...

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

• Both had counts of children with parent(s) in the household pointing to two or<br />

fewer parents, meaning that the two family units were not identifiable on a side;<br />

• The number of identified parents was not equal to the total number of household<br />

members older than 25 in the household on either side, meaning that parents could<br />

correspond to roster members identified by other relationship codes;<br />

• The number of identified children was not equal to the total number within the<br />

relevant age range in the household on either side, meaning that children with<br />

parents could correspond to roster members identified by other relationship codes;<br />

<strong>and</strong><br />

• There were not three generations in the household with first <strong>and</strong> second<br />

generation parents both having children in the appropriate age range. This was<br />

already accounted for by the counts for one or both sides.<br />

If the pair was a parent-child pair, the final count was determined using imputation.<br />

7. Two family units might be in the household but the conditions given in item #6 were<br />

not met. If there were no bad ages or relationship codes within the relevant age ranges<br />

(for both children <strong>and</strong> parents), the two families in the household might have been<br />

already accounted for when the counts of children with parent(s) in the household<br />

were determined for each side. The maximum of the two counts was used as the final<br />

count if the household members in the roster older than 25 (of parental age) were<br />

either both equal to the number of household members older than 25 in the screener<br />

roster or both different than the number of members older than 25 in the screener<br />

roster. However, if the number of household members older than 25 in the screener<br />

roster was equal to the number of members older than 25 in one of the pair member's<br />

rosters but not the other, then the count of children with parent(s) in the household<br />

corresponding to the pair member with a roster matching the screener roster (among<br />

household members of potential parental age) was used as the final count of children<br />

with parent(s) in the household.<br />

8. If one pair member did not have a valid roster <strong>and</strong> the pair member with a valid roster<br />

was within the valid age range <strong>and</strong> was a sibling to the other pair member, but the<br />

count of children with parent(s) in the household from his roster was only 1, then the<br />

final count was set to 2.<br />

9. If the pair relationship was not parent-child nor was it sibling-sibling, but one side<br />

had nonzero counts of children with parent(s) in the household <strong>and</strong> the other did not,<br />

it was necessary to decide who to believe. This occurred often because one of the<br />

respondents was a relative outside the nuclear family unit––like a cousin or<br />

aunt/uncle––whose own parents did not live in the household, or the respondent was a<br />

S-6

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!