Chapter Three: Sampling: Design and Procedures
Chapter Three: Sampling: Design and Procedures
Sampling:
Design and Procedures
Chapter Outline
1) Overview
2) Sample or Census
3) The Sampling Design Process
4) A Classification of Sampling Techniques
A survey is a process by which certain
quantitative/Qualitative facts pertaining to
certain field of enquiry are collected to
throw light on the objective of a research
plan
A complete enumeration of all the items in
Sampling Techniques
Nonprobability Probability
Sampling Techniques Sampling Techniques
test markets
purchase engineers selected in industrial
marketing research
Quota Sampling
Quota sampling may be viewed as two-stage restricted judgmental
sampling.
The first stage consists of developing control categories, or quotas,
of population elements.
In the second stage, sample elements are selected based on
convenience or judgment.
Population Sample
composition composition
Control
Characteristic Percentage Percentage Number
Sex
Male 48 48 480
Female 52 52 520
____ ____ ____
100 100 1000
Snowball Sampling
In snowball sampling, an initial group of
respondents is selected, usually at random.
characteristics
Called pseudo random sampling
Stratified Sampling
A two-step process in which the population is
partitioned into subpopulations, or strata.
The strata should be mutually exclusive and
collectively exhaustive in that every population
element should be assigned to one and only one
stratum and no population elements should be
omitted.
Next, elements are selected from each stratum by a
random procedure, usually SRS.
A major objective of stratified sampling is to increase
precision without increasing cost.
Stratified Sampling
The elements within a stratum should be as
homogeneous as possible, but the elements in different
strata should be as heterogeneous as possible.
In proportionate stratified sampling, the size of the sample
drawn from each stratum is proportionate to the relative size of
that stratum in the total population.
In disproportionate stratified sampling, the size of the sample
from each stratum is proportionate to the relative size of that
stratum and to the standard deviation of the distribution of the
characteristic of interest among all the elements in that stratum.
Cluster Sampling
The target population is first divided into mutually exclusive and
collectively exhaustive subpopulations, or clusters.
Then a random sample of clusters is selected, based on a
probability sampling technique such as SRS.
For each selected cluster, either all the elements are included in
the sample (one-stage) or a sample of elements is drawn
probabilistically (two-stage).
Elements within a cluster should be as heterogeneous as
possible, but clusters themselves should be as
homogeneous as possible. Ideally, each cluster should be a
small-scale representation of the population.
Choosing Nonprobability vs.
Probability Sampling
Table 11.4 cont.
Conditions Favoring the Use of
Factors Nonprobability Probability
sampling sampling
random sampling
When is purposive or judgment sampling