Mongolia - MICS 2005
Reference ID | MNG-NSO-MICS2005-v1.0 |
Year | 2005 |
Country | Mongolia |
Producer(s) | National Statistical Office of Mongolia |
Sponsor(s) | UNICEF - UNICEF - Funding of survey implementation Ministry of Finance of Mongolia - MoFM - Funding of survey implementation |
Collection(s) | |
Metadata | Download DDI Download RDF |
Created on | Jul 31, 2013 |
Last modified | Jul 08, 2014 |
Page views | 517220 |
Downloads | 13034 |
Variable Groups
- Interview and HH identification
- Characteristics of dwelling
- Water and sanitation
- Characteristics of the head
- Members characteristics
- Education
- Children's living arrangements
- Child mortality
- Maternal and newborn health
- Nutrition
- Child health
- Source and cost of supplies
- Contraception
- Child protection
- Marriage/union
- HIV-AIDS knowledge
- Wealth Index
- Asset ownership
- Weighting coefficients
- Others
Sticks, rocks, animals shells, leaves
(CE3B)
File: Child
File: Child
Overview
Type:
Discrete Format: character Width: 1 | Valid cases: 582 (579.7) Invalid: 0 (0) |
Children aged 0-4 years
The mother or caretaker of the child aged 0-4 years
Categories
Value | Category | Cases | Weighted | |
---|---|---|---|---|
B | Objects and materials found outside the living quarters | 582 | 580 | 100.0% |
Warning: these figures indicate the number of cases found in the data file. They cannot be interpreted as summary statistics of the population of interest.
Questions and instructions
I am interested in learning about the things that (name) plays with when he/she is at home.
What does (name) play with?
Does he/she play with objects and materials found outside the living quarters, such as sticks, rocks, animals, shells, or leaves?
What does (name) play with?
Does he/she play with objects and materials found outside the living quarters, such as sticks, rocks, animals, shells, or leaves?
This question is used to learn about different types of playthings used by the child. We want to know if the child has objects to play with, and what these are, even if they do not include store-bought toys. We are interested in learning about other objects that are used as playthings, such as ordinary household objects and natural materials.
Extra care should be taken to ask this question and record the responses. Experience has shown that respondents find it very easy to give the same answer to a list of different playthings. Often they will answer 'Yes' to all items, whether or not it is true, perhaps because they think this is the 'correct' response or one that will please the interviewer.
After asking 'What does he/she play with?" do not pause; start asking whether the child plays with playthings from each of the categories listed. For example, ask: "Does he/she play with household objects, such as bowls, plates, cups or pots?" and so on.
Use below codes:
'A' - HH objects
'B' - Objects and materials found outside the living quarters
'C' - Homemade toys
'D' - Toys that came from a store
'Y' - No playthings
If the respondent answers 'Yes' to any of these prompted categories, then probe to learn specifically what the child plays with to ascertain the response. For example, probe by saying "What does he/she specifically play with?" or "Can you please give an example?" If you ascertain that the child uses playthings that would fall into each of the prompted categories, circle the appropriate code.
Circle 'Y' if the child does not play with any of the items mentioned. Note that if 'Y' is circled, none of the other codes should be circled.
Extra care should be taken to ask this question and record the responses. Experience has shown that respondents find it very easy to give the same answer to a list of different playthings. Often they will answer 'Yes' to all items, whether or not it is true, perhaps because they think this is the 'correct' response or one that will please the interviewer.
After asking 'What does he/she play with?" do not pause; start asking whether the child plays with playthings from each of the categories listed. For example, ask: "Does he/she play with household objects, such as bowls, plates, cups or pots?" and so on.
Use below codes:
'A' - HH objects
'B' - Objects and materials found outside the living quarters
'C' - Homemade toys
'D' - Toys that came from a store
'Y' - No playthings
If the respondent answers 'Yes' to any of these prompted categories, then probe to learn specifically what the child plays with to ascertain the response. For example, probe by saying "What does he/she specifically play with?" or "Can you please give an example?" If you ascertain that the child uses playthings that would fall into each of the prompted categories, circle the appropriate code.
Circle 'Y' if the child does not play with any of the items mentioned. Note that if 'Y' is circled, none of the other codes should be circled.