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Page 1: Chapter Fifteen Sampling and Sample Size. Sampling A sample represents a microcosm of the population you wish to study If the sample is representative.

Chapter FifteenChapter Fifteen

Sampling and Sample Size

Page 2: Chapter Fifteen Sampling and Sample Size. Sampling A sample represents a microcosm of the population you wish to study If the sample is representative.

Sampling

• A sample represents a microcosm of the population you wish to study

• If the sample is representative of the population from which it is drawn, the researcher can have confidence in concluding that the results are generalizable to the entire population studied

Page 3: Chapter Fifteen Sampling and Sample Size. Sampling A sample represents a microcosm of the population you wish to study If the sample is representative.

The Rationale of SamplingThe Rationale of Sampling

• Save time & money and yet get an accurate description of a population

• Poorly selected samples may misrepresent the population

• Literary Digest example Landon vs Roosevelt. George Gallop establishes his name by indicating reservations

Page 4: Chapter Fifteen Sampling and Sample Size. Sampling A sample represents a microcosm of the population you wish to study If the sample is representative.

Key DistinctionsKey Distinctions

• Population: the entire group one wishes to describe; it could be the student body at St. FXU, the province, the state, the country

• Sampling frame: the list from which a sample is selected

• Sample: those units (individuals) selected for a study

• Response rate: percentage of successfully contacted respondents who participate

Page 5: Chapter Fifteen Sampling and Sample Size. Sampling A sample represents a microcosm of the population you wish to study If the sample is representative.

Probability Sampling TechniquesProbability Sampling Techniques

• Simple random sample: each unit in the population has a equal chance of being selected.

• Process: – number units– table of random numbers or computer (SPSS)

will do selection– replacement units selected using the same

process

Page 6: Chapter Fifteen Sampling and Sample Size. Sampling A sample represents a microcosm of the population you wish to study If the sample is representative.

Probability Sampling Cont.Probability Sampling Cont.

• Systematic Sample: here the process is to give everyone an equal chance but process a little different.

• Process– list, map, diagram as appropriate– divide sample required into number on list to

determine skip interval or sample interval– random numbers used to begin randomly then

every kth number selected

Page 7: Chapter Fifteen Sampling and Sample Size. Sampling A sample represents a microcosm of the population you wish to study If the sample is representative.

Probability Sampling Cont.Probability Sampling Cont.

• Stratified Sample: sometimes to ensure an adequate representation of sub-groups, we use stratified samples, which provide random samples within sub-groups. For example:– study of nursing graduates from different

classes– members of early, middle, late adolescent age

group

Page 8: Chapter Fifteen Sampling and Sample Size. Sampling A sample represents a microcosm of the population you wish to study If the sample is representative.

Probability Sampling Cont.Probability Sampling Cont.

• Stratified Sampling proceed by:• determine sample size needed for sub-groups

• obtain list for each sub-group

• using either simple random or systematic sampling select respondents

• Note that within SPSS it is possible to weight cases to return the sample so it can represent the larger population

Page 9: Chapter Fifteen Sampling and Sample Size. Sampling A sample represents a microcosm of the population you wish to study If the sample is representative.

Probability Sampling Cont.Probability Sampling Cont.

• Multi-Stage Area Sample: these are used when doing large populations such as states, provinces, or a whole country– identify primary sampling units: select sample– identify sub-units within selected units (city

blocks, square kilometers etc.)– identify households within sub-units: select

sample– within household select respondents

Page 10: Chapter Fifteen Sampling and Sample Size. Sampling A sample represents a microcosm of the population you wish to study If the sample is representative.

Non-Probability SamplingNon-Probability Sampling

• Non-probability samples do not provide an equal or a known chance of being selected

• Quota Sample: the parallel here is the stratified sample; a quota sample requires that a certain number be selected in each category--usually done on a first-come first included basis. Sampling stops when enough are included in each category

Page 11: Chapter Fifteen Sampling and Sample Size. Sampling A sample represents a microcosm of the population you wish to study If the sample is representative.

Non-Probability Sampling Cont.Non-Probability Sampling Cont.

• Convenience Sampling: purely convenience used to choose participants. Examples include using all those in attendance at a meeting/class; interviewing people in a mall clinic or doctor’s office

Page 12: Chapter Fifteen Sampling and Sample Size. Sampling A sample represents a microcosm of the population you wish to study If the sample is representative.

Non-Probability SamplingNon-Probability Sampling

• Snowball Sampling: also known as “referral sampling”. – Used on hard to locate groups that one cannot

obtain a list of the individuals who possess the attributes or phenomenon you wish to study; e.g. blind, those with some sort of disability, “closet” homosexuals, etc

Page 13: Chapter Fifteen Sampling and Sample Size. Sampling A sample represents a microcosm of the population you wish to study If the sample is representative.

Non-Probability SamplingNon-Probability Sampling• Purposive sampling: uses the researcher’s

knowledge of the population to hand pick the cases to be included

• common in qualitative studies

• useful when you are interested in understanding the experiences of certain segments of a population

• limitation is inability to assess representativeness of participants in relation to the population

Page 14: Chapter Fifteen Sampling and Sample Size. Sampling A sample represents a microcosm of the population you wish to study If the sample is representative.

Non-Probability SamplingNon-Probability Sampling

• Expert Sampling: a type of purposive sampling using the Delphi technique

• Researcher handpicks a group of participants because of their expertise in the study phenomenon

• A means to achieve experts’ consensus on an issue

Page 15: Chapter Fifteen Sampling and Sample Size. Sampling A sample represents a microcosm of the population you wish to study If the sample is representative.

Qualitative Sampling Techniques

• Interested in samples of participants who can share their interpretation of the experience with others

• Goal is understanding the meaning of the participants’ experience

• Typically not interested in generalizing their results

• Typically do not use probability sampling

Page 16: Chapter Fifteen Sampling and Sample Size. Sampling A sample represents a microcosm of the population you wish to study If the sample is representative.

Sample Size DeterminationSample Size Determination

• Decide on confidence level--usually 95% level selected; this means that you will be 95% confident that the sample will be within a given range; 19 out of 20 times sample will be within a given range

• Choose major variable and key on that

• Determine precision needed: how precise do you need the estimate to be?

Page 17: Chapter Fifteen Sampling and Sample Size. Sampling A sample represents a microcosm of the population you wish to study If the sample is representative.

Non-Probability SamplingNon-Probability Sampling

• Compute sample size:

2

Reqd. Sample = Confidence limit * sd pop

Accuracy

Page 18: Chapter Fifteen Sampling and Sample Size. Sampling A sample represents a microcosm of the population you wish to study If the sample is representative.

Non-Probability SamplingNon-Probability Sampling

• Are there sufficient cases?

• Adjust Sample for Time and Cost factors

• Sample size and accuracy: to double accuracy you quadruple sample size

Page 19: Chapter Fifteen Sampling and Sample Size. Sampling A sample represents a microcosm of the population you wish to study If the sample is representative.

Power Analysis & Sample Size

• Power is the ability to detect real differences among variables

• Power consists of 4 elements: alpha or significance level, sample size, effect size, power

• If any 3 are known the fourth can be found using the power analysis formula

Page 20: Chapter Fifteen Sampling and Sample Size. Sampling A sample represents a microcosm of the population you wish to study If the sample is representative.

Elements of Power

• Alpha refers to the probability of making a Type I error (.05 or .01)

• Beta refers to the probability of making a Type II error

• Power of a statistical test = (1-beta) = 1-.20=.80 The standard for power is .80

• Effect Size is the strength of the relationship among the study variables

Page 21: Chapter Fifteen Sampling and Sample Size. Sampling A sample represents a microcosm of the population you wish to study If the sample is representative.

Determining Effect Size

• Literature Review (meta-analysis)

• Pilot Study

• Dummy Table Analysis

• Estimate on the Basis of Clinical Experience or Previous Research

Page 22: Chapter Fifteen Sampling and Sample Size. Sampling A sample represents a microcosm of the population you wish to study If the sample is representative.

Determining Sample Size

• Estimate the population effect size

• Review the literature to see if prior studies report the effect of the intervention

• Consult a table of sample size requirements in a statistic text to determine the # of participants per group for various effect sizes, powers & alpha or significant levels

• If no previous research is available estimate the effect size based on experience, intuitive knowledge, & literature

Page 23: Chapter Fifteen Sampling and Sample Size. Sampling A sample represents a microcosm of the population you wish to study If the sample is representative.

By Convention Effect Size in a 2-group Test of Means

• .20 for small effects

• .50 for medium effects

• .80 for large effects

• Most nursing studies can not expect effect sizes in excess of .50

• .20 to .40 effect size is a realistic expectation for nursing studies

Page 24: Chapter Fifteen Sampling and Sample Size. Sampling A sample represents a microcosm of the population you wish to study If the sample is representative.

Other Sampling Issues

• Sample size & accuracy - to double accuracy sample size must be quadrupled

• Sample size & confidence limits - to move from 95% to 99% multiply sample size by 1.73

• Impact of refusals

• Confirming representativeness


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