S3 Notes
S3 Notes
Advantages Disadvantages
Census Should give an accurate result Very expensive
Time consuming
Cannot be used when
testing is for destruction
Sample Survey Costs less than a census Data may not be as
Results are obtained quicker accurate
Less data to deal with Sample may not be large
enough to give a true
representation
(Simple) Random sampling – Sample where every possible sample of size n has an equal chance
of being selected
Sampling frame – Is a list identifying every single sampling unit that could be included in the
sample
Advantages Disadvantages
Cheap to do Not suitable when population is large
Simple to do Sampling frame is required
Each person is included only once
Random number sampling – Each element is given a number to identify it and the numbers of
the required elements are selected by using random number tables or other random number
generators
Advantages Disadvantages
Numbers are random and free from bias Not suitable when population is large
Easy to use
Lottery sampling – Each element of the population is identified by some characteristic such as a
name or number, which is put on a ticket. All tickets (same size and shape) are put into a
container and drawn one at a time (without replacement). Elements of the population
corresponding to the tickets are selected
Advantages Disadvantages
Tickets are drawn at random Not suitable when population is large
Easy to use A sampling frame is needed
Every ticket has a known chance of being
selected
S3 Revision Notes
Systematic sampling – The required elements are chosen at regular intervals from an ordered
list
o Interval = population size (N) / sample size (n)
o Used when population is too large for simple random number sampling
Advantages Disadvantages
Simple to use Only random is ordered list is truly random
Suitable for large samples Can lead to bias
Stratified sampling – Population is divided into mutually exclusive strata and a random sample is
taken from each
o The proportion of the strata in the sample is the same as the proportion of the strata in
the population
o Number sampled in a stratum = (number in stratum/number in population) x overall
sample size
o Used when sample is large and population naturally divides into mutually exclusive
groups
Advantages Disadvantages
Can give more accurate estimates than Strata could overlap is they are not defined
random sampling where a there are clear clearly
strata present
Reflects the population structure
Quota sampling – The population is divided into groups in terms of gender, etc. The number of
people in each group is set to try and reflect the group’s proportion in the whole population. The
interviewer selects the actual sampling units
Advantages Disadvantages
Enables field work to be done quickly Not possible to estimate the sampling
Costs are kept low errors
Administering the test is easy Can introduce interviewer bias in who is
included
Primary data – Data collected by, or on behalf of, the person who is going to use the data
Secondary data – Data that is neither collected by, nor on behalf of, the person who is going to
use the data. The data is second hand