Population and Sampling Methods
Population and Sampling Methods
and Immersion
Quarter 3 – Module 7:
Population and Sampling Methods
Lesson 2:
Common sense and research both involve an attempt to understand various aspects
of our world. However, research but arguably not common sense, involves an explicit,
systematic approach to finding things out, often through a process of testing out our
preconceptions.
This process begins with deciding on your research question as student-researcher.
Again, it is necessary to conduct your literature review and to decide on a research
design which addresses the research question. Decisions made at this point include
considering what kind of data you will be collected, and who will be invited to
participate.
In our first lesson, measurements tell you how often or how many people were
selected for the study. Your research question involves exploring how much or how
often something happens. It is probably appropriate to use quantitative
research.
If the research question involves exploring how people experience something or what
their views are, exploring a new area where issues are not yet understood or properly
identified (e.g., before developing questionnaire items), assessing whether a new
service is implementable, and looking at ‘real-life’ context, or a sensitive topic where
you need flexibility to avoid causing distress, the study needs to be discussed
through qualitative research. Qualitative research attempts to broaden and/or deepen
our understanding of how things came to be the way they are in our social world. The
activities on this module will help you better understand the non-probability
sampling for your qualitative study.
In a non-probability sample, individuals are selected based on nonrandom
criteria, and not every individual has a chance of being included. This type of
sample is easier and cheaper to access but it has a higher risk of sampling
bias. You cannot use it to make a valid statistical inference about the whole
population.