Edit:
Thanks for your feedback, everyone, especially the specific reports of the types of mistakes you've been making, and pointing out that people have been trying to get around this by straight out re-taking the survey.
Considering this further evidence, we ran a test over the last few days, assessing whether:
Allowing respondents to move back through the survey affects the distribution of responses on certain key questions that we are treating as dependent variables for analysis (e.g. overall career satisfaction), and
Whether allowing respondents to move back affected the distribution of responses to the "used/want" question about programming languages, including the proportion of respondents who chose both "used in the last year" and "want to use in the next year" for at least one language. We chose this question as a proxy for overall response quality because it is long, relatively complicated, and will be a key "report out" question when the results are published.
Regarding #1, we found no significant differences, which indicates that our concern about measurement of independent variables impacting the measurement of dependent variables isn't playing out on the ground. We also found no significant differences regarding #2, which indicates that the overall survey error introduced by the lack of a back button is low.
Given those results, and the feedback we've received here, we've decided to enable moving back. New respondents will be able to edit their responses whilst taking the survey, but will not be able to further edit responses once they click "done" at the end. Respondents who took the survey while the "prev" button was turned off will be able to edit their responses if the following are both true:
- You still have a record of which link you accessed the survey from in your browser history.
- SurveyMonkey recognizes you.
In that case, you will "land" on the last page of the survey and find you are able to "prev" back through it. We will keep this editing capability available through the end of January.
If those conditions do not apply to you (e.g. you were in incognito mode when you took the survey), I'm afraid we don't have a solution for editing your original results at this time. If that's an issue for you, please let me know in the comments here, and we'll try to work the problem.
Original answer:
I'm sorry you had a frustrating experience. That said, this is a feature, not a bug, and we will not be activating a "back" button.
Why? There are three key reasons:
First, we want responses to be candid, and for respondents to not over-think things. The philosophy here is "first thought, best thought."
Second, we want to be able to control for ordering effects. I.e. if being exposed to question #2 makes you re-consider your answer to question #1, so you go back and change your answers, then your response to #1 has been biased.
Finally -- and this goes for any survey, but especially one where developers are the audience -- we don't want to encourage any reverse-engineering of the survey logic, with people trying to open question paths that they had skipped previously or anything like that. (Anyone who's interested in that will be able to see the full instrument when we publish it, after the field period closes.)
The downside to this approach is there are cases where people make mistakes due to (among other things) not reading the questions carefully, mis-tapping on a mobile screen, etc. If that's what happened to you, again, I'm sorry for any frustration.