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Political Science 30 Political Inquiry
Drawing a Sample
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Nominal Variables Measures of Central Tendency: Measures of Dispersion
Mode Measures of Dispersion None, but you can note how many different values the variable may take on (how many categories there are)
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Ordinal Variables Measures of Central Tendency: Measures of Dispersion
Mode Median Measures of Dispersion “Range” (i.e. the variables “strength of religious belief” ranges from “very low” to “very high”)
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Interval Variables Measures of Central Tendency:
Mode Mean Median Measures of Dispersion Standard Deviation and Variance Range
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Ratio Variables Measures of Central Tendency: Measures of Dispersion
Mode Mean Median Measures of Dispersion Standard Deviation and Variance Range
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Measures of Dispersion (Of Observations, p. 155)
The variance is a measure of how spread out cases are, calculated by: Compute the distance from each case to the mean, then square that distance. Find the sum of these squared distances, then divide it by N-1.
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Measures of Dispersion (Of Observations, p. 156)
The standard deviation is the square root of the variance
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Drawing Samples in “Observational Studies”
Sample vs. the Population How to Draw a Random Sample Don’t Confuse a Random Sample/Selection with Random Assignment
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Sample vs. the Population
An observational study simply observes cases, without attempting to impose a treatment and without requiring any quasi- or natural experimental design. Researchers can ask their cases questions in order to measure some variable. Most of the time, researchers look closely at a small sample of the overall population.
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Sample vs. the Population
A population is the entire group of cases about which you want information. A sample is a subset of the population which is used to gain information about the whole population. Population Sample
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Sample vs. the Population
A parameter is a number describing a population. It is a usually a mystery. A statistic is a number describing a sample. Statistics vary from sample to sample. If our sample is representative of the population, sample statistics will closely approximate population parameters.
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How to Draw a Random Sample
A simple random sample gives all members of the population an equal chance to be drawn into the sample. Draw names out of a hat, a really big hat Label every case in the population with a number, then draw some random numbers In a telephone poll, random digit dialing uses a random number generator to get even those with unlisted numbers.
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