Sampling in Research
Sampling in Research
Sampling in Research
INTRODUCTION
Sampling in research is mainly designed to equip beginners with knowledge on the
general issues on sampling that is the purpose of sampling in research, errors of
sampling and how to minimize them, types of sampling and guides for deciding the
sample size.
What is research?
According to Webster (1985), to research is to search or investigate exhaustively. It is
a careful or diligent search, studious inquiry or examination especially investigation
or experimentation aimed at the discovery and interpretation of facts, revision of
accepted theories or laws in the light of new facts or practical application of such new
or revised theories or laws, it can also be the collection of information about a
particular subject.
What is a sample?
A sample is a finite part of a statistical population whose properties are studied to gain
information about the whole (Webster, 1985). When dealing with people, it can be
defined as a set of respondents (people) selected from a larger population for the
purpose of a survey.
A population is a group of individual persons, objects, or items from which samples
are taken for measurement for example a population of presidents or professors,
books or students.
What is sampling?
Sampling is the act, process, or technique of selecting a suitable sample, or a
representative part of a population for the purpose of determining parameters
or characteristics of the whole population.
What is the purpose of sampling?
To draw conclusions about population from samples, we must use inferential
statistics which enables us to determine a populations characteristics by
directly observing only a portion (or sample) of the population. We obtain a
sample rather than a complete enumeration (a census) of the population for
many reasons. Obviously, it is cheaper to observe a part rather than the
whole, but we should prepare ourselves to cope with the dangers of using
samples. Some are better than others but all may yield samples that are
inaccurate and unreliable.
There would be no need for statistical theory if a census rather than a sample was
always used to obtain information about populations. But a census may not be
practical and is almost never economical. There are six main reasons for sampling
instead of doing a census. These are;
Economy:
The economic advantage of using a sample in research obviously, taking a sample
requires fewer resources than a census. For example, let us assume that you
are one of the very curious students around. You have heard so much about
the famous Cornell and now that you are there, you want to hear from the
insiders. You want to know what all the students at Cornell think about the
quality of teaching they receive, you know that all the students are different
so they are likely to have different perceptions and you believe you must get
all these perceptions so you decide because you want an in depth view of
every student, you will conduct personal interviews with each one of them
and you want the results in 20 days only, let us assume this particular time
you are doing your research Cornell has only 20,000 students and those who
are helping are so fast at the interviewing art that together you can interview
at least 10 students per person per day in addition to your 18 credit hours of
course work. You will require 100 research assistants for 20 days and since
you are paying them minimum wage of $5.00 per hour for ten hours ($50.00)
per person per day, you will require $100000.00 just to complete the
interviews, analysis will just be impossible. You may decide to hire
additional assistants to help with the analysis at another $100000.00 and so
on assuming you have that amount on your account.
As unrealistic as this example is, it does illustrate the very high cost of census. For the
type of information desired, a small wisely selected sample of Cornell students can
serve the purpose. You dont even have to hire a single assistant. You can complete
the interviews and analysis on your own. Rarely does a circumstance require a census
of the population, and even more rarely does one justify the expense.
The time factor:
A sample may provide you with needed information quickly. For example, you are a
Doctor and a disease has broken out in a village within your area of
jurisdiction, the disease is contagious and it is killing within hours nobody
knows what it is. You are required to conduct quick tests to help save the
situation. If you try a census of those affected, they may be long dead when
you arrive with your results. In such a case just a few of those already
infected could be used to provide the required information.
The very large populations:
Many populations about which inferences must be made are quite large. For example,
consider the population of high school seniors in United States of America, a group
numbering 4,000,000. The responsible agency in the government has to plan for how
they will be absorbed into the different departments and even the private sector. The
employers would like to have specific knowledge about the students plans in order to
make compatible plans to absorb them during the coming year. But the big size of the
population makes it physically impossible to conduct a census. In such a case,
selecting a representative sample may be the only way to get the information required
from high school seniors.
The partly accessible populations:
There are some populations that are so difficult to get access to that only a sample can
be used. Like people in prison, like crashed aeroplanes in the deep seas, presidents
etc. The inaccessibility may be economic or time related. Like a particular study
population may be so costly to reach like the population of planets that only a sample
can be used. In other cases, a population of some events may be taking too long to
occur that only sample information can be relied on. For example natural disasters
like a flood that occurs every 100 years or take the example of the flood that occurred
in Noahs days. It has never occurred again.
The destructive nature of the observation:
Sometimes the very act of observing the desired characteristic of a unit of the
population destroys it for the intended use. Good examples of this occur in
quality control. For example to test the quality of a fuse, to determine
whether it is defective, it must be destroyed. To obtain a census of the quality
of a lorry load of fuses, you have to destroy all of them. This is contrary to
the purpose served by quality-control testing. In this case, only a sample
should be used to assess the quality of the fuses
Accuracy and sampling:
A sample may be more accurate than a census. A sloppily conducted census can
provide less reliable information than a carefully obtained sample.
BIAS AND ERROR IN SAMPLING
A sample is expected to mirror the population from which it comes; however, there is
no guarantee that any sample will be precisely representative of the
population from which it comes. Chance may dictate that a disproportionate
number of untypical observations will be made like for the case of testing
fuses, the sample of fuses may consist of more or less faulty fuses than the
real population proportion of faulty cases. In practice, it is rarely known
when a sample is unrepresentative and should be discarded.
Sampling error
What can make a sample unrepresentative of its population? One of the most frequent
causes is sampling error.
Sampling error comprises the differences between the sample and the population that
are due solely to the particular units that happen to have been selected.
For example, suppose that a sample of 100 American women are measured and are all
found to be taller than six feet. It is very clear even without any statistical prove that
this would be a highly unrepresentative sample leading to invalid conclusions. This is
a very unlikely occurrence because naturally such rare cases are widely distributed
among the population. But it can occur. Luckily, this is a very obvious error and can
be detected very easily.
The more dangerous error is the less obvious sampling error against which nature
offers very little protection. An example would be like a sample in which the average
height is overstated by only one inch or two rather than one foot which is more
obvious. It is the unobvious error that is of much concern.
There are two basic causes for sampling error. One is chance: That is the error that
occurs just because of bad luck. This may result in untypical choices. Unusual units in
a population do exist and there is always a possibility that an abnormally large
number of them will be chosen. For example, in a recent study in which I was looking
at the number of trees, I selected a sample of households randomly but strange
enough, the two households in the whole population, which had the highest number of
trees (10,018 and 6345) were both selected making the sample average higher than it
should be. The average with these two extremes removed was 828 trees. The main
protection against this kind of error is to use a large enough sample. The second cause
of sampling is sampling bias.
Sampling bias is a tendency to favour the selection of units that have particular
characteristics.
Sampling bias is usually the result of a poor sampling plan. The most notable is the
bias of non response when for some reason some units have no chance of appearing in
the sample. For example, take a hypothetical case where a survey was conducted
recently by Cornell Graduate School to find out the level of stress that graduate
students were going through. A mail questionnaire was sent to 100 randomly selected
graduate students. Only 52 responded and the results were that students were not
under stress at that time when the actual case was that it was the highest time of stress
for all students except those who were writing their thesis at their own pace.
Apparently, this is the group that had the time to respond. The researcher who was
conducting the study went back to the questionnaire to find out what the problem was
and found that all those who had responded were third and fourth PhD students. Bias
can be very costly and has to be guarded against as much as possible. For this case,
$2000.00 had been spent and there were no reliable results in addition, it cost the
researcher his job since his employer thought if he was qualified, he should have
known that before hand and planned on how to avoid it. A means of selecting the units
of analysis must be designed to avoid the more obvious forms of bias. Another
example would be where you would like to know the average income of some
community and you decide to use the telephone numbers to select a sample of the
total population in a locality where only the rich and middle class households have
telephone lines. You will end up with high average income which will lead to the
wrong policy decisions.
Non sampling error (measurement error)
The other main cause of unrepresentative samples is non sampling error. This type of
error can occur whether a census or a sample is being used. Like sampling error, non
Knowing why a study is being conducted may create incorrect responses. A classic
example is the question: What is your income? If a government agency is asking, a
different figure may be provided than the respondent would give on an application for
a home mortgage. One way to guard against such bias is to camouflage the studys
goals; Another remedy is to make the questions very specific, allowing no room for
personal interpretation. For example, "Where are you employed?" could be followed
by "What is your salary?" and "Do you have any extra jobs?" A sequence of such
questions may produce more accurate information.
Induced bias
Finally, it should be noted that the personal prejudices of either the designer of the
study or the data collector may tend to induce bias. In designing a questionnaire,
questions may be slanted in such a way that a particular response will be obtained
even though it is inaccurate. For example, an agronomist may apply fertilizer to
certain key plots, knowing that they will provide more favourable yields than others.
To protect against induced bias, advice of an individual trained in statistics should be
sought in the design and someone else aware of search pitfalls should serve in an
auditing capacity.
SELECTING THE SAMPLE
The preceding section has covered the most common problems associated with
statistical studies. The desirability of a sampling procedure depends on both its
vulnerability to error and its cost. However, economy and reliability are competing
ends, because, to reduce error often requires an increased expenditure of resources. Of
the two types of statistical errors, only sampling error can be controlled by exercising
care in determining the method for choosing the sample. The previous section has
shown that sampling error may be due to either bias or chance. The chance component
(sometimes called random error) exists no matter how carefully the selection
procedures are implemented, and the only way to minimize chance sampling errors is
to select a sufficiently large sample (sample size is discussed towards the end of this
tutorial). Sampling bias on the other hand may be minimized by the wise choice of a
sampling procedure.
TYPES OF SAMPLING TECHNIQUES:
There are three primary kinds of samples: the probability sampling, the non
probability sampling, and the mixed sampling. They differ in the manner in which the
elementary units are chosen.
1) The probability sample:
This may be the most important type of sample. A random sample allows a known
probability that each elementary unit will be chosen. For this reason, it is
sometimes referred to as a probability sample. This is the type of sampling
that is used in lotteries and raffles. For example, if you want to select 10
players randomly from a population of 100, you can write their names, fold
them up, mix them thoroughly then pick ten. In this case, every name had
any equal chance of being picked.