RM - Sampling Flashcards
What is bias?
A systematic distortion.
What is an opportunity sample?
A sample of participants produced by selecting people who are most easily available at the time of the study.
What is population?
The group of people that the researcher is interested in studying, from whom a sample is drawn, and about whom generalisations can be made.
What is a random sample?
A sample of participants produced by using a random technique so that every member of the target population has an equal chance of being selected.
What is sampling?
The method used to select participants, such as random, opportunity and volunteer sampling, or to sample behaviours in an observation, such as event or time sampling.
What is a stratified sample?
A sample of participants produced by identifying subgroups according to their frequency in the population. Participants are then selected randomly from the subgroups.
What is a systematic sample?
A sample obtained by selecting every nth person (where n is any number). This can be a random sample if the first person is selected using a random method; you then select every nth person after that.
Uses a predetermined system.
What is volunteer bias?
A form of sampling bias (distortion) because volunteer participants have special characteristics, such as usually being more highly motivated than randomly selected participants.
What is a volunteer sample?
A sample of participants that relies solely on volunteers to make up the sample. Also called a self-selected sample.
What is another name for subgroups?
Strata
What are the strengths of opportunity sampling?
Easiest method as you just use the first suitable participants you can find, which means it takes less time to locate your sample than if using one of the other techniques.
What are the limitations of opportunity sampling?
Inevitably biased because the sample is drawn from a small part of the population.
E.g. stopping people in town on a Monday morning would not include working professionals or people from rural areas.
What are the strengths of random sampling?
Unbiased as all members of the target population have an equal chance of selection.
What are the limitations of random sampling?
Need to have a list of all members of the population and then contact all of those selected, which may take some time.
What are the strengths of stratified sampling?
Likely to be more representative than other methods because there is a proportional and randomly selected representation of subgroups.