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Forms

ϳԹ mandates use of Qualtrics for gathering information from users.

Online forms should not be built using any technology except for Qualtrics; Google Forms and other form options are not university-supported.

All ϳԹ employees have a Qualtrics account available to them.  with your FlashLine ID and password to get started.

Qualtrics Features

  • Creating polls and surveys where statistical results are desired
  • Applying logic to survey questions
  • Tracking participants
  • Anonymouse distribution
  • A library of survey templates

Web Operating Procedures and data stewardship

By linking to or embedding a form on a webpage, Drupal users acknowledge acceptance and compliance with the Web Form Operating Procedure.

The Web Form Operating Procedure is an operating procedure attached to Section B of the  Administrative Policy Regarding Web Publishing Policy Register 9-01.3.

Employees with access to Drupal, the ϳԹ content management system, are data stewards and need to be informed that creating a form that requests private information comes with certain privacy standards. Any exceptions need approved by Information Services Vice President and the Division of University Communications and Marketing Senior Vice President.

View the Web Form Operating Procedure  

Embed into Drupal

Follow these directions to embed Qualtrics into a Drupal body field.

  1. Copy the URL from Qualtrics provided by clicking the survey's Distribution tab and then the Anonymous Link option from the left sidebar.
    1. The URL will be formatted similar to this example: 
  2. Navigate to the Body on the page where the form will appear.
  3. Change the Text Format from Filtered HTML to Full HTML.
  4. Select the Source link (first option in row one of icons).
  5. Paste the following iframe code replacing "your-qualtrics-url" with the Qualtrics URL for your form.
    1. <p><iframe height="850px" title="title of form here" src="/%3Ca%20href%3D"https://kent.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/your-qualtrics-url">https://kent.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/your-qualtrics-url" width="100%"></iframe></p>
    2. * Please note the bolded title information in the code above. Update the text within the quotes to match the title of your Qualtrics form 
  6. Select the Save button to save the page.

How-to Guides and Further Resources

Customize the Form Style

Applying the ϳԹ style is possible. Simply add custom CSS to your Qualtrics form.

  1. In Qualtrics select Look and Feel.
  2. Select the Back to Old Editor option (lower left corner).
  3. Select Advanced.
  4. Select +Array.
  5. Replace the default text with the custom CSS code.
  6. Select Save to save the custom style.
  7. Select Save again to save the form.
  8. Select the General tab.
  9. Update the button text where the Next Button Text should contain Next or Submit and the Back Button Text should contain Back.
Share Form Access
  1. Confirm the user has an active Qualtrics account. Signing into Qualtrics will activate an account. If necessary, request they  with their FlashLine user name password.
  2. Locate the project (form/survey).  
  3. From the drop-down arrow on the right select Share Project.
  4. Enter the user's email - Qualtrics will search and find the Kent employee (that’s why they have to have logged in and activated their account).
  5. Once found, select Add.
  6. Follow the prompts to collaborate with them.
Access to Results
  1. Click on Responses tab.
  2. From the Tools option on the right, select Export Data and follow the prompts to download.
Key Terms Used in Qualtrics
  • Block
    • A group of related questions on a Qualtrics survey. All Qualtrics surveys must have at least one block.
  • Skip Logic
    • Skips past the remaining items in a section of the survey based on some condition.
  • Display Logic
    • Displays a given question to the user based on some condition.
  • Branch Logic
    • Similar to Display Logic, but used when you have an one or more blocks of questions that should be displayed (or not displayed) based on some condition. Accessed under the Survey Flow window. Use this to implement Informed Consent statements, end-of-survey redirects to collect contact information for incentives, and more.
  • Forced Response
    • Requires users to answer a given question before advancing to the next page.
  • Request Response
    • Alerts a user if they have not answered a question, but allows them to continue to the next page without answering if they choose.
  • Content Validation
    • Checks if the text entry for a question matches a certain format (e.g. numeric input, dates, phone numbers, zip codes, email addresses, …)
  • Carry Forward Choices
    • The response options for a question are inherited from the user’s responses to another question. Improves user experience by only asking users to rate/rank items that are relevant to them. Pair with display logic for best results.
Commonly Used Question Types
  • Descriptive Text
    • Simple text display with no user input. Use for introduction messages or special directions.
  • Multiple Choice
    • Encompasses both “Single Answer” and “Multiple “Answer” (“check all that apply”) questions.
  • Text Entry
    • User enters text. Pair with content validation to assure data quality, especially when the desired response is a number (e.g. “How many years have you been teaching?”)
  • Slider
    • User clicks and drags a marker along a number line. The researcher sets the minimum and maximum values for the line. Responses are recorded as numeric values. Can be used as an alternative to text entry with numeric content validation.
  • Matrix Table
    • Compactly presents a table of several items that are all answered on the same scale. Often used with Likert scales, but can also use text entry or constant sums.
  • Constant Sum
    • User enters numeric values that are then summed to get the total. In order to make sense, the numeric values being captured must have the same units. Example: “In the last week, how many hours did you spend on: 1. Replying to emails? 2. Grading? 3. Planning lessons?”
  • Rank Order
    • Users are shown a list of items and must order them from “top” (1) to bottom (last).
  • Timer
    • Records how long a user has spent on a given page of the survey and how many times they have interacted with it (number of clicks). Useful for estimating how long it takes to respond to labor-intensive questions, as well as detecting if respondents are satisficing.
       
Resources
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