Chapter 7 Flashcards
Population
A larger group from which a sample is drawn; the group to which a study’s conclusions are intended to be applied. Also called population of interest.
Sample
The group of people, animals, or cases used in a study; a subset of the population of interest.
Census
A set of observations that contains all members of the population of interest
Biased Sample
A sample in which some members of the population of interest are systematically left out, and therefore the results cannot generalize to the population of interest. Also called unrepresentative sample.
Unbiased Sample
A sample in which all members of the population of interest are equally likely to be included (usually through some random method), and therefore the results can generalize to the population of interest. Also called representative sample.
Convenience Sampling
Choosing a sample based on those who are easiest to access and readily available; a biased sampling technique.
Self-Selection
A form of sampling bias that occurs when a sample contains only people who volunteer to participate
Probability Sampling
A category name for random sampling techniques, such as simple random sampling, stratified random sampling, and cluster sampling, in which a sample is drawn from a population of interest so each member has an equal and known chance of being included in the sample. Also called random sampling.
Nonprobability Sampling
A category name for nonrandom sampling techniques, such as convenience, purposive, and quota sampling, that result in a biased sample.
Simple Random Sampling
The most basic form of probability sampling, in which the sample is chosen completely at random from the population of interest (e.g., drawing names out of a hat)
Systematic Sampling
A probability sampling technique in which the researcher uses a randomly chosen number N, and counts off every Nth member of a population to achieve a sample
Cluster Sampling
A probability sampling technique in which clusters of participants within the population of interest are selected at random, followed by data collection from all individuals in each cluster
Multistage Sampling
A probability sampling technique involving at least two stages: a random sample of clusters followed by a random sample of people within the selected clusters
Stratified Random Sampling
A form of probability sampling; a random sampling technique in which the researcher identifies particular demographic categories, or strata, and then random;y selects individuals within each category
Oversampling
A form of probability sampling; a variation of stratified random sampling in which the researcher intentionally overrepresents one or more groups