Thursday, April 19, 2007

Quota Sampling


“Quotas” are selecting fixed numbers of units in each of a number of categories.



Definition:

Quota sampling is a data collection method designed to select sample units in a block of a predetermined size.


In simple words, in a Quota sample, quotas are set up according to some/ specified characteristics.It is not based on random selection. Instead, respondents who fit into predetermined categories ('quota controls') are found by interviewers until their quotas are filled.

Let us do an activity. You are given a population. You have to decide the quotas for you sample. For this survey, the quota controls to be used are sex and age (young, middle, and old).A recent census has reported that there are:

5252 males

5789 females

2940 young
3921 middle aged

4180 old
in the town. You should choose the numbers in your sample in each category so that they are approximately representative of the town as a whole.How many men do you want in your sample? How many women do you want in your sample? How many young people do you want in your sample? How many middle-aged people do you want in your sample? How many older people do you want in your sample?
When you decide the approximate number of quotas in each category, that means you have already done your quota sampling.


When using this strategy, researchers identify important characteristics that they already know the target population possesses, and then they select the nonrandom (and therefore biased) sample in such a way as to make it correspond to the population with regard to these known characteristics.For example, we might get a quota sample of Indian teenagers in a city by consulting census information and discovering what percentage of teenagers in that city is of each gender, what percentage belongs to each of the various races, and what percentage lives in each of several different neighborhoods. Based on this information, we would set quotas even before we set out to conduct our survey, determining that we would get a certain number of males, a certain number of females, a certain number of engineering students, of arts students, and so forth. When conducting the survey, we would use these quotas to set the limit on how many persons possessing each characteristic we would include in our survey.Although it is desirable to set quotas before we select the sample, it is also possible to use quota sampling strategies retrospectively. For example, an organization with a small budget may be interested in knowing the attitudes of Indian college students regarding drug and alcohol use. Realizing that students are likely to react to questions by giving socially desirable answers, this organization might hire a researcher at a nearby university who is known for her ability to establish rapport and obtain frank answers from students. Because of time and travel restrictions, this researcher would have to collect her data from respondents at or near her own university. She might obtain detailed responses to a wide variety of questions from all 200 of the students in her classes, which all are required to take. Can the organization use these results to generalize about "Indian college students"? A further examination indicates these students had CET scores typical of Indian college students, and that there were percentages of south Indians, north Indians, males, females, old students, young students, rich students, poor students, arts majors, engineering majors, etc. comparable with the percentages known to be typical of the rest of the country. The researcher also notes that two of her many questions overlapped almost exactly with those asked by a nationally prominent survey organization, and the responses of her students were almost identical to those. At this point, the organization has good reason to believe that these results can be generalized. Their confidence cannot be as great as if they had conducted a random survey with an equally good interviewer, but they are more confident than if they had sent their interviewer over to the local area to interview students or if they had conducted a random survey in a manner very likely to obtain reactive, false responses.The flaw in this after-the-fact quota sampling is that the demographics of the sample may indeed reveal obvious biases with regard to the target characteristics. Then the researcher is left with nothing more than a limitation that can be stated but no longer corrected. For instance, in the preceding example, what would the organization do if the researcher reported that her group included more of South Indian students and engineering majors? This would be a difficult problem with after-the-fact quota sampling. Preplanned quota sampling is more likely to minimize differences. In the preceding example, the problems would be minimized by selecting fewer South Indian students or engineering majors for the sample. The retrospective strategy can increase our confidence in nonrandom samples when the subjects meet the quotas and caution us regarding the nature of biases when the subjects do not meet the quotas.

Characteristic:

Within the quotas, the selection of sample items depends exclusively on personal judgment.

E. g. In a radio listening survey, the aim is to interview 500 people living in a certain area and that out of every 100 people interviewed 60 are to be housewives, 25 farmers and 15 children under the age 15. Within these quotas the interviewer is free to select the people interviewed.


Advantages:

1. It is less costly. The cost per person interviewed is relatively small.

2. It is administratively easy.

3. It is quick to do.4

. It does not need any sampling frame.

5. Can be used when random sampling is impossible.

Disadvantages:

1. Since the samples are not randomly selected, the sample selected under this technique may not be true representative of the universe.

2. Within quota the sampling may be unrepresentative (eg all young, attractive females)

3. Control over fieldwork is difficult. Hence, the results may be biased because of the personal beliefs and prejudices of the investigator in the selection of the units under study.

Limitations:

1. There are numerous opportunities or biases which may invalidate the results.

2. If a person refuses to respond, the interviewer simply selects someone else.Because of the risk of personal prejudice and bias entering the process of selection, the quota sampling is not widely used in practical work.

3. Non-random element is its greatest weakness and quota versus probability has been a matter of controversy for many years.


When to use: Quota sampling is often used in public opinion studies. It occasionally provides satisfactory results if the interviewers are carefully trained and if they follow their instructions closely. If done well, quota sampling can lead to strong inferences.


Activity:You want to study opinions of people about the educational programs that are broadcasted on television. What type of samples would you think would be important to include? Form quotas that you feel appropriate for conducting this research.

Resources:



Sharma Jai Narain (2007), Research methodology: the discipline and its dimensions,New Delhi Deep and Deep Publications.

This post is in response to your activity of presentation.
http://metca6research.blogspot.com/

Saturday, April 7, 2007

Difference between Random Sampling and Convenient sampling

Random Sampling


  1. Entire list of population is required for random sampling
  2. Individuals are selected randomly.
  3. This method is also called as the lottery method.
  4. This method can be generalized to the population
  5. Selection of the sample is not purposive/biased


Convenience sampling

  1. Entire list of population may not be required.
  2. Groups of individuals are selected randomly.
  3. This method is also called as accidental sampling or opportunity sampling.
  4. This method cannot be generalized to the population
  5. Selection of the sample is purposive/biased

Image source: http://www.webdesign.org/img_articles/10365/cards.jpg

http://www.shutterstock.com

Friday, April 6, 2007

Communication And its Errors!!!!!
You know the famous Abbott and Costello routine, 'Who's on first?' about a baseball game in which Mr. Whooze is on first, Mr. Whats is on second, and Mr. Heeze is on third. As they move through this conversation the two comedians become thoroughly and hilariously confused. At one point the exchange goes like this:

Costello: 'I thought you said he's on second.'

Abbott: 'No, Heeze's on third.'

Costello: 'Who's on third?'

Abbott: 'No, Whooze's on first!'

Costello: 'What?'

Abbott: 'He's on second!'

Costello: 'Who's on second?'

Abbott: 'No, I told you. Whooze's on first.'

It's all very funny. But confusion in communication is generally no laughing matter.
It results in hurt feelings, anger, and perhaps broken relationships.
Can anything be done about poor communication? Yes, our communication skills can be improved.
You know the old line:
'I know that you believe you understand what you think I said, but I am not sure you realize that what you heard is not what I meant.'
That doesn't have to be. Communication is the process of exchanging information, feelings or attitudes through symbols, sounds, signs or behaviour. So not all communication is verbal: your eyebrows or hands communicate as much (sometimes more) than your vocal chords.
'Communication theory' is built on the idea that all communication involves a sender, a message, one or more channels, and a receiver. The sender 'encodes' the message in some form; the receiver 'decodes' or interprets the message, and feeds back to the sender some sort of response. But for all this to happen the sender and receiver have to 'connect' with some common knowledge and experience. So when a message is 'transmitted' it is not necessarily 'comprehended'.
All meaningful human relationships involves communication, and therefore some conflict when the communication is not understood, or is interpreted as a threat. So for communication in a family to be effective, strong personal relationships are essential: that is, there ought to be a commitment to the well-being of the other/s; you should understand their feelings; there ought to be a significant level of trust; and behaviours ought to be fairly predictable.

Monday, April 2, 2007

Criteria for sampling

  • Goal Orientation

The sampling design should be based on the study's goals and objectives

  • Measurability

The sampling design provides the data necessary for analysis.

Research seeks to develop or test theories based on ‘hard evidence’. Concepts of interest must be stated in measurable ways.

  • Practicality

The actual activities of sampling should be identified and feasible in the actual situation

The sample design must translate theoretical sam­pling models into clear, simple, practical, and complete instruc­tions for the conduct of the survey.

  • Economy

Research objectives can be met with available resources.

Economy concerns the fulfillment of survey objectives with minimum cost (effort) and the degree of achieving that aim. Economy requires that the objectives be met with avail-
able time, financial, personnel, and any other necessary resources.

Problems that a researcher might face in accessing a sample:

  1. In between the research, one or more samples may fall ill due to some viral disease. In such a case, parents of the sample may be reluctant to allow the researcher to study their child.
  2. If the research is on the effect of parents' long working hours on the child's academic achievement, it would be difficult for the researcher to get the parents' precious time.
  3. Generally, we ask samples to feedin the survey as 'anonymous', and when some of the samples provide inadequate data, like some may forget to feed in some questions in hurry, or some may have misinterpreted them, then it is difficult to know whom to contact.
  4. If the research is on the effect of exam phobia on the students' health and their achievements, then parents may be reluctant to give permission to study their children.

Monday, March 12, 2007

5 Simple rules to be happy!


Go ahead Dreamers!!!!

If you can imagine it you can create it. If you can dream it, you can become it.
Ward, William Arthur
If one advances confidently in the direction of his dreams, and endeavors to live the life which he has imagined, he will meet with a success unexpected in common hours.
Thoreau, Henry David
If you have built castles in the air, your work need not be lost; that is where they should be. Now put the foundations under them.
Henry David Thoreau

Dreams come true; without that possibility, nature would not incite us to have them.
John Updike
In your heart, keep one still, secret spot where dreams may go and sheltered so may thrive and grow.
Driscoll, Louise
Your aspirations are your possibilities.
Johnson, Samuel
Always dream and shoot higher than you know how to. Don't bother just to be better than your contemporaries or predecessors. Try to be better than yourself.
Faulkner, William
Trust in dreams, for in them is hidden the gate to eternity.
Gibran, Kahlil Nothing is more sad than the death of an illusion.
Arthur Koestler
The best is yet to be.
Browning, Robert