TY - CHAP
T1 - Calendar and time diary methods
AU - Córdova-Cazar, Ana Lucía
AU - Belli, Robert F.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© Springer Nature Singapore Pte Ltd. 2019. All rights are reserved.
PY - 2019/1/12
Y1 - 2019/1/12
N2 - For decades, individual and social well-being have been reduced to material wellbeing. Given that economic or financial success cannot fully capture an integral concept of human well-being, a new paradigm has emerged, one which focuses on the nonmarket contribution and behavior of households. This new paradigm goes beyond the typical scope of economic science in which only the activities that can be measured in monetary terms are included. A critical aspect of this paradigm is that the way people spend their time needs to be taken into account in a rigorous and scientific way, as it is only by understanding previous life events that present and future life course development can be predicted. Thus, valid retrospective and behavioral reports are needed from individuals. When the goal, however, is not only to conduct qualitative research (e.g., through in-depth interviews), but to draw quantitative inferences from samples to the general population, survey interviewing is inevitably involved. In this chapter, we will examine calendar and time diary methods which have been shown to be especially effective when it comes to assessing well-being. Although these methods forego the standardization of question wording (the most prevalent approach in traditional survey interviewing), they are nevertheless able to produce reliable and valid responses, while also encouraging conversational flexibility that assists respondents to remember and correctly report the interrelationships among past events. Further, in this chapter we also discuss the application of the calendar and time diary methods in several health and social sciences fields of research, through which well-being is evaluated.
AB - For decades, individual and social well-being have been reduced to material wellbeing. Given that economic or financial success cannot fully capture an integral concept of human well-being, a new paradigm has emerged, one which focuses on the nonmarket contribution and behavior of households. This new paradigm goes beyond the typical scope of economic science in which only the activities that can be measured in monetary terms are included. A critical aspect of this paradigm is that the way people spend their time needs to be taken into account in a rigorous and scientific way, as it is only by understanding previous life events that present and future life course development can be predicted. Thus, valid retrospective and behavioral reports are needed from individuals. When the goal, however, is not only to conduct qualitative research (e.g., through in-depth interviews), but to draw quantitative inferences from samples to the general population, survey interviewing is inevitably involved. In this chapter, we will examine calendar and time diary methods which have been shown to be especially effective when it comes to assessing well-being. Although these methods forego the standardization of question wording (the most prevalent approach in traditional survey interviewing), they are nevertheless able to produce reliable and valid responses, while also encouraging conversational flexibility that assists respondents to remember and correctly report the interrelationships among past events. Further, in this chapter we also discuss the application of the calendar and time diary methods in several health and social sciences fields of research, through which well-being is evaluated.
KW - Calendar method
KW - Time diary method
KW - Time-use research
KW - Well-being
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85082163788&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/978-981-10-5251-4_2
DO - 10.1007/978-981-10-5251-4_2
M3 - Capítulo
AN - SCOPUS:85082163788
SN - 9789811052507
SP - 1219
EP - 1236
BT - Handbook of Research Methods in Health Social Sciences
PB - Springer Singapore
ER -