5. Is there bias?

Bias means a tendency to favour some answers over others for some reason, usually to help sway the result in a way they want.

Example: Gathering unrepresentative data

A political party wants to find out if their ideas are going to be popular in the country as a whole. So they set up a survey asking only their party members.

This is clearly biased because they have excluded all non-party members from the survey. The data is unrepresentative of all people in the country.

Example: Asking leading questions

This is a question that encourages the person to answer in a certain way. The question might already contain the answer they want such as 'Curry is the nations' favourite food isn't it?'

Or it might have a built in assumption, such as 'How much will the price of football tickets go up next year?' It assumes that tickets will go up.

Conclusion:

Spotting a bias can be easy if it is very obvious, but it can be very difficult to spot if it is subtle. Survey questions should be carefully worded to avoid bias.

 

Challenge see if you can find out one extra fact on this topic that we haven't already told you

Click on this link: Data bias and leading questions