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MånsT
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Calculating Primary Groupsprimary groups

I am preparing to analyze some data and I have a question about how to go about it. It is a 39 question survey with 5-item Likert scale responses. I will be using the responses to separate the participants into the category that they score highest in for further analysis. The problem is that Category A corresponds to 14 questions, Category B has 11 questions, and Category C has 14 questions. What is the best way to go about determining which one the participant scores highest in, since the # of questions is not equal? Will it work to take their total possible points in each category and divide it by the number of points possible, then compare their percentages across the three categories to see which is the highest?

Thanks for taking the time to review my question!

Calculating Primary Groups

I am preparing to analyze some data and I have a question about how to go about it. It is a 39 question survey with 5-item Likert scale responses. I will be using the responses to separate the participants into the category that they score highest in for further analysis. The problem is that Category A corresponds to 14 questions, Category B has 11 questions, and Category C has 14 questions. What is the best way to go about determining which one the participant scores highest in, since the # of questions is not equal? Will it work to take their total possible points in each category and divide it by the number of points possible, then compare their percentages across the three categories to see which is the highest?

Thanks for taking the time to review my question!

Calculating primary groups

I am preparing to analyze some data and I have a question about how to go about it. It is a 39 question survey with 5-item Likert scale responses. I will be using the responses to separate the participants into the category that they score highest in for further analysis. The problem is that Category A corresponds to 14 questions, Category B has 11 questions, and Category C has 14 questions. What is the best way to go about determining which one the participant scores highest in, since the # of questions is not equal? Will it work to take their total possible points in each category and divide it by the number of points possible, then compare their percentages across the three categories to see which is the highest?

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LadyM
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Calculating Primary Groups

I am preparing to analyze some data and I have a question about how to go about it. It is a 39 question survey with 5-item Likert scale responses. I will be using the responses to separate the participants into the category that they score highest in for further analysis. The problem is that Category A corresponds to 14 questions, Category B has 11 questions, and Category C has 14 questions. What is the best way to go about determining which one the participant scores highest in, since the # of questions is not equal? Will it work to take their total possible points in each category and divide it by the number of points possible, then compare their percentages across the three categories to see which is the highest?

Thanks for taking the time to review my question!