3 Sampling Probability Non Probability
3 Sampling Probability Non Probability
Laura Lake
Types of Sampling
Probability sample a method of sampling that uses of random selection so that all units/ cases in the population have an equal probability of being chosen. Non-probability sample does not involve random selection and methods are not based on the rationale of probability theory.
accurately covers all members of the population being studied so they have a chance to be sampled.
The quality of the population list (sampling frame) i.e. whether it is up-to-date and complete is the most important feature for accuracy in the sampling.
Systematic Sampling
Similar to simple random sample.
No table of random numbers select directly from sampling frame.
Select according to fraction (100
sample from 1,000 frame then 10% so every 10th unit)
Define population
Work out what fraction of the frame the sample size represents
First unit select by random numbers then every nth unit selected
(e.g. every 10th)
Define population
Non-Probability Sampling
Three main types of non-probability sampling: 1.Convenience
2.Quota
3.Snowball
Convenience Sampling
A sample selected for ease of access, immediately known population group.
Quota Sampling
Aim is to sample reflecting proportions of population in different categories or quotas (e.g. gender, age, ethnicity). Used in often in market and opinion poll research. + easy to manage, quick
only reflects population in terms of the quota, possibility of bias in selection, no standard error
Snowball Sampling
Useful when a population is hidden or difficult to gain access to.
The contact with an initial group is used to make contact with others.
+ access to difficult to reach populations (other methods may not yield any results). - not representative of the population and will result in a biased sample as it is self-selecting.
Sample Size?
How large should my sample be in order for it to be representative? Larger samples are not necessarily better how representative a sample it depends on the sampling technique used and the size of the population. Determining sample size is dependent of how much error you are prepared to accept in your sample.
Confidence Intervals
Example:
Voting behaviour Labour Conservative Liberal Democrat Other % of poll 37% 35% 22% 6%
A confidence interval of +/- 3% at the 95% confidence level means that, 95% of the time, the true answer will be within 3% of the survey findings.
References
Bryman, A. (2008) Social Research Methods. 3rd Ed. Oxford: Oxford University Press. David, M. and Sutton, C. (2004) Social Research :The Basics. London: Sage. ESRC Survey Measurement Programme. Online: available from Survey Resource Network http://www.surveynet.ac.uk/ Oppenheim, A. (2000) Questionnaire Design, Interviewing and Attitude Measurement. London: Continuum
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Author
Institute Title Description Date Created Educational Level
Laura Lake
University of Plymouth
Numeracy & Quantitative Methods Sampling: Probability & non-probability sampling Overview of probability and non-probability sampling techniques in quantitative research. March 2011. Level 5 UKOER LFWOERK UOPCPDRM Learning from Woerk WBL Work Based Learning CPD Continuous Professional Development Probability sample, non-probability sample, simple random sample, systematic sample, stratified random sample, cluster/ multi-stage random sample, stratification, convenience sampling, quota sampling, snowball sampling, sampling error, confidence intervals. Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK: England & Wales license
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