Support #727
closed
Follow up moved out participants
Added by Emily Lowthian almost 8 years ago.
Updated almost 8 years ago.
Description
I am looking into using your dataset (waves 1 – 6, end user license version) however, I am slightly confused how you follow up your participants.
For example, if you had a household of a mother, father and son and data collection started in 2009 (when their son was 14) and by (wave 5) he had moved out at 18-19 years would you continually follow him up even at a different household? I’m interested in looking at social mobility and I wonder how this would work.
If there is a document on this, potentially I have missed it in one of your user guides or technical reports, a pointer towards this would be greatly appreciated.
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Hi Emily,
the Understanding Society User Guide - which is available from the study website and the UKDS data series accompanying documents - has a designated section describing the
following rules. In brief, we attempt to interview every original sample member (which includes children) annually so long as they do not move out of scope. You can identify and track individuals over time by using their unique cross-wave person identifier (pidp).
you may also find our online training courses useful. there are many worked examples that show how to link information from different data files, over time, and for different members of the household, see https://www.understandingsociety.ac.uk/documentation/training/online
Hope this helps,
Gundi
- Private changed from Yes to No
Gundi Knies wrote:
Hi Emily,
the Understanding Society User Guide - which is available from the study website and the UKDS data series accompanying documents - has a designated section describing the
following rules. In brief, we attempt to interview every original sample member (which includes children) annually so long as they do not move out of scope. You can identify and track individuals over time by using their unique cross-wave person identifier (pidp).
you may also find our online training courses useful. there are many worked examples that show how to link information from different data files, over time, and for different members of the household, see https://www.understandingsociety.ac.uk/documentation/training/online
Hope this helps,
Gundi
Thank you Gundi - many thanks
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- % Done changed from 80 to 100
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