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creating a table with multiple columns
for a High School science project my daughter created a survey with 39
possible responses (3 groups of 13 responses in each group) the people taking the survey are supposed to pick the top 4 responses in each group (numbered 1-4, 1 being the highest). Other information is Age, grade and gender of the person taking the survey. What would be the best way to create the table and eventually charts to diplay the results of the survey? I was thinking of a flat table with a number in the cells correspondig to their answers but I have no idea how to create the charts or compare the answers with others to find patterns. So far she has 400 surveys to compare. Any suggestions? |
creating a table with multiple columns
This looks best handled by a pivot table, but without a bit more detail, it
is a tad difficult to suggest where you begin. Can you give us some idea of the questions, say the 3 groups, and 3 or 4 questions in each group, and we can give a better steer. -- HTH Bob (there's no email, no snail mail, but somewhere should be gmail in my addy) "bart230" wrote in message ... for a High School science project my daughter created a survey with 39 possible responses (3 groups of 13 responses in each group) the people taking the survey are supposed to pick the top 4 responses in each group (numbered 1-4, 1 being the highest). Other information is Age, grade and gender of the person taking the survey. What would be the best way to create the table and eventually charts to diplay the results of the survey? I was thinking of a flat table with a number in the cells correspondig to their answers but I have no idea how to create the charts or compare the answers with others to find patterns. So far she has 400 surveys to compare. Any suggestions? |
creating a table with multiple columns
Thank you for helping the survey is below. Picture it in three columns. Also
she would like to be able to analyze the data somehow to show relationships. Like if the chose a fear of blood dig they also show a fear of needles? What Teens Fear Survey This is a voluntary and anonymous survey on what, as the name says, teens fear. All I need is your age, grade, and gender. Pick 4 fears you may have from each of the 3 categories: specific, social and agoraphobia. Number them in order from greatest to least. 1 being the most feared and 4 being the least. If you dont have a fear in a category, mark €śnone€ť. Or, if you have your own you would like to add, write it in €śother€ť. Only mark fears you have. Please write on this paper. When you are done, give it back to your teacher. Please fill out only one survey. Age Grade M/F Specific phobia # Social phobia # Agoraphobia # Certain insects Public speaking Being away from home Certain animals Meeting new people Being in or driving a car Certain day, date, or number Being center of attention Going through a tunnel Heights Being observed doing something Being in a crowded area Thunder/Lightning Being teased or criticized Being on a bridge Confined spaces Eating in public Being alone Dark Drinking in public Losing control in public Blood Dating Fear of dying Needles/Shots Talking to people in authority Fear of going crazy Knives/Sharp objects Using public bathrooms Being in a new place Fire Looking other in the eye Fear of fainting None None None Other Other Other "Bob Phillips" wrote: This looks best handled by a pivot table, but without a bit more detail, it is a tad difficult to suggest where you begin. Can you give us some idea of the questions, say the 3 groups, and 3 or 4 questions in each group, and we can give a better steer. -- HTH Bob (there's no email, no snail mail, but somewhere should be gmail in my addy) "bart230" wrote in message ... for a High School science project my daughter created a survey with 39 possible responses (3 groups of 13 responses in each group) the people taking the survey are supposed to pick the top 4 responses in each group (numbered 1-4, 1 being the highest). Other information is Age, grade and gender of the person taking the survey. What would be the best way to create the table and eventually charts to diplay the results of the survey? I was thinking of a flat table with a number in the cells correspondig to their answers but I have no idea how to create the charts or compare the answers with others to find patterns. So far she has 400 surveys to compare. Any suggestions? |
creating a table with multiple columns
On Sat, 22 Dec 2007, in microsoft.public.excel.charting,
bart230 said: Thank you for helping the survey is below. Picture it in three columns. Also she would like to be able to analyze the data somehow to show relationships. Like if the chose a fear of blood dig they also show a fear of needles? I would suggest a table arranged in the following eight columns: Survey response number Age Grade Sex Rank # of fear (1-4) Specific phobia Social phobia Agoraphobia Each survey response will take up four rows, and the response number, age, grade and sex will be redundantly repeated in those four rows. This would be a good place to use a relational database, to avoid duplication, and Excel can do relational databases, but if you just want to do this as a flat file and put up with the redundancy, that's okay too. You can now use pivot tables to show breakdowns and subsets, and pivot charts for some basic presentations. More complicated presentations may be possible if you use e.g. panel charts as in the examples he http://peltiertech.com/Excel/Charts/StackedCharts.html These chart types may use pivot tables as the base, but I don't think you'll be easily able to design them using Pivot Charts. PS an alternative table design using only seven columns would be this: Survey response number Age Grade Sex Rank # of fear (1-4) Phobia type (Specific, Social, Agoraphobia) Phobia This time a single survey response would be twelve rows instead of four. But while this would be good database practice, I again don't think you need to be too bothered with it. It would probably make your reports harder to design unless you're used to that way of thinking. -- Del Cotter NB Personal replies to this post will send email to , which goes to a spam folder-- please send your email to del3 instead. |
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