CHAPTER OUTLINE
ANSWERS TO TEXTBOOK EXERCISES
SUGGESTED READINGS

Chapter 6  / Sampling

Web Resources



The U.S. Census and the Sampling Controversy

Counting People
 
An essay from PBS discusses the 2000 Census, including the controversy over the use of sampling to adjust for Census undercount. The page also contains useful links with further discussions of the controversy.


How Samples are Selected in National Surveys

 
The following links describe the sampling designs of four major surveys. The first and most elementary discussion describes sample selection in the Gallup poll; the second describes the sampling procedure in the New York Times/CBS News Poll. Based on telephone surveys, both of these polls use random-digit dialing. The third and fourth links describe complex multi-stage sampling designs for in-person surveys conducted by the National Opinion Research Center and the Bureau of the Census.

How Polls Are Conducted
 
An excerpt from the book Where America Stands, this essay provides an overview of how the Gallup Organization conducts public opinion telephone surveys.  Gallup poll editors describe the selection of a random sample and the selection of respondents within households.

A Sample of a Sample: How the 'Typical' Respondent Is Found
 
This brief non-technical article describes the random-digit dialing sampling procedure of the New York Times/CBS News Poll.

Sampling Design and Weighting in the General Social Survey
 
At the GSS Documentation Web site, click on “Appendix A.” The paper provides a detailed description, including the sampling frame and interviewer instructions, of the multi-stage, stratified random sampling design of the General Social Survey.

Sample Design of the Current Population Survey
 
This page describes the multi-stage sampling design of the Current Population Survey (CPS), a monthly survey of about 50,000 households conducted by the Bureau of the Census for the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The CPS is the primary source of information on the labor force characteristics of the U.S. population, including estimates of employment, unemployment, earnings, hours of work, and other indicators.


Tools for Selecting a Random Sample and Determining Sample Size

Research Randomizer
 
This site contains a program that assists users in drawing a random sample. Lesson 1 in the Tutorial shows how to draw a random sample of 50 from a population of 643; Lesson 4 shows how to select a random sample of 100 telephone numbers from the same telephone exchange or prefix.

Sample Size Calculator
 
You can use the calculator at this site to determine how many cases you need to select to get results with a given level of precision or to find the level of precision in an existing sample.


Understanding Sample Size Considerations


Determining Sample Size
 
Though this document was prepared for agricultural researchers, it contains a good overview of the criteria that must be specified to determine the appropriate sample size and the strategies for determining sample size.

 


Copyright © 2009 Royce A. Singleton, Jr. and Bruce C. Straits. All rights reserved.
Reproduction in any form or by any means is strictly prohibited without prior written permission.