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Published byJuliana Parsons Modified over 9 years ago
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Types of Sampling
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Some Vocabulary Homogeneous groups: All members of the group have a characteristic that is the same. Heterogeneous groups: all members of the group have characteristics that differ but make up the characteristics of the entire population
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Stratified sampling Split the population into homogeneous groups before selecting a sample. Then use simple random sampling within each strata to make a larger sample.
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Stratified sampling Example Split the school into grades (each grade is a strata) Do a simple random sample to choose 10 people from each grade. Combine the 10 people from each grade to make a random sample of 40 people from the school.
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Cluster Samples Split the population into heterogeneous groups (clusters). Randomly select a cluster (or a few clusters) to make up your sample of the population. Take a Census of that cluster.
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Cluster Sampling Example When studying ages of doctors in Delaware… Each hospital is a cluster. Select a hospital as your sample and survey ALL of the doctors in that hospital.
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Stratified vs. Cluster Think of a Boston cream pie which consists of a layer of yellow cake, a layer of crème, and a layer of another cake, and then chocolate frosting…
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Layered Cake Cluster: Taking a vertical slice of the cake. Learn about the whole pie and all of its layers combined by taking that vertical slice Strata: take a random piece of yellow cake, random piece of chocolate, random piece of crème. Get an idea of the entire cake from parts of each horizontal layer
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Systematic Sampling Put all people in the population in a random order and then select every n-th member. Careful: Order of the list must not be grouped in any way related to the study.
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Systematic example Put the school in alphabetical order and select every 20 th name.
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