sampling

Cards (10)

  • what is the memory aid
    r - random sample
    o - opportunity smoke
    v - volunteering sample
    s - systematic sample
    s - stratified sample
  • how would you do a random sample
    • identify all the names of the participants e.g all the names of children in a show
    • put all the names onto identical pieces of paper into a 'hat'
    • draw names blind
    • allocate participants to conditions
  • what do you get from a random sample
    • representative of the target population
    • generalised findings to the population
    • high population validity
  • how do you do an opportunity sample
    • researcher approaches potential available participants
    • those who agree to take part become the sample
  • what do you get from an opportunity sample
    • bias
    • not representative of the target population
    • low population validity
  • how do you do a volunteer sample
    • put an advert in newspaper/ online
    • those who want to participate will approach the researcher
    • put an advert in newspaper/ online
    • those who want to participate will approach the researcher
  • what do you get from a volunteer sample
    • not representative of the target population - participant variables
    • not everyone in the target population has a chance of being selected
  • how do you do stratified sampling
    • identify all members of the target population
    • identify different sub groups relevant to your study
    • randomly select from each category in the same proportion that they exist in the target population
  • what do you get from stratified sampling
    • representative of the target population
    • more likely than random sampling
    • identified sub groups all people are represented
  • how do you do systematic sampling
    • the target population are put into a list and then every nth person is chosen
    • divide population size by sample size