LGBT Statistics Interview Questionnaire
An open-ended questionnaire will be used to collect data since a lot of informing will be required to make the most accurate conclusions from the data to be collected.
1. What is your sexual identity?
2. What factors have contributed to the sexual identity adopted?
3. What challenges have you encountered so far?
4. If you are an LGBT student, answer the following
-What forms of discrimination have you encountered so far?
-What forms of abuse have you suffered due to your sexual orientation?
-What measures have taken to address the challenges experienced?
5. Non LGBT Students to answer the following
-Are you aware of any LGBT persons in your learning institution?
-What problems do LGBT students experience which you are aware of?
-Are there any LGBT students who have been expelled of left school, which you know?
-What does your school administration do to support LGBT students?The draft and the final report must contain the following items.
A transmittal letter or memorandum, as appropriate.
Title page
A Table of Contents that shows all the headings and subheadings contained in the body of the report and the correct page number
where each heading and subheading appears in the text of the report.
A List of Figures containing the figure number and title of each graphic insert with the correct page number.
Page numbers on all pages except the transmittal letter/memorandum and the title page.
All pages prior to the Introduction will be in Roman numerals. All other page numbers will be in Arabic numerals
An executive summary.
Headings and subheadings that match the Table of Contents.
At least three quotations or attributions documented with in-text citations using one of the approved documentation style formats.
At least two graphic insertions (table, chart, diagram, photo, etc.) that are relevant to the text. More than two graphics should be used
if it helps convey your message to the reader.
Criteria for evaluation of the solution(s) clearly described.
The conclusion must include a realistic evaluation of your proposed project. The evaluation can be positive, negative, or somewhere
between positive and negative. Do not force a conclusion to meet your preconceived notions. Your supervisors are relying on your
unbiased professional judgment. If you force a conclusion that turns out to be wrong, your career could suffer.
A Works Cited page or References page with at least three sources of information. At least one source should be an authored,
published article from a business or professional journal, or an authored, published book.
Some reports will require an appendix, or appendices. An appendix should be used to include background material which is important to
the report but does not lend itself to inclusion in the main body. Examples of material to include in the appendices are completed
questionnaires, material from equipment suppliers such as specifications and prices, detailed drawings or graphics, or computer
printouts. Each Appendix will be designated by a letter, such as Appendix A, Appendix B, etc. and will carry a descriptive title. In addition, the title of each appendix will appear in the Table of Contents of the report.
The Works Cited page or Reference page tells the reader how, or where, to find the source, such as the book or journal. An in-text
citation tells the reader from which source it came and on which page the information is found that is included in the citation.
Take particular care to adequately cite Internet sources in APA or MLA format. Just citing the home page of a large Internet site or just
providing a link will not be considered adequate citation.