Social Research Methods: Qualitative and Quantitative Approaches

(Brent) #1
Reasons for Sampling
Sampling Strategies
Conclusion

Qualitative and Quantitative


Sampling


Sampling is a major problem for any type of research. We can’t study every case of
whatever we’re interested in, nor should we want to. Every scientific enterprise tries
to find out something that will apply toeverything of a certain kind by studying
a few examples,the results of the study being, as we say, “generalizable.”
—Howard Becker,Tricks of the Trade,p. 67

REASONS FOR SAMPLING


When we sample, we select some cases to examine
in detail, and then we use what we learn from them
to understand a much larger set of cases. Most, but


not all, empirical studies use sampling. Depending
on the study, the method we use for sampling
can differ. Most books on sampling emphasize its
use in quantitative research and contain applied
mathematics and quantitative examples. The pri-
mary use of sampling in quantitative studies is to
create a representative sample (i.e., a sample,a
selected small collection of cases or units) that

In Promises I Can Keep,an in-depth study of low-income mothers, Edin and Kefalas
(2005) first identified eight low-income neighborhoods in the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania,
area through extensive qualitative fieldwork and quantitative analysis of census data.
Each neighborhood met three selection criteria: at least 20 percent of householders were
below the poverty line, at least 20 percent of all households had a single parent, and each
had a large number of Black, White, and Hispanic residents. In each neighborhood, Edin
and Kefalas recruited half of the mothers to interview through referrals from local experts
(teachers, social workers, public nurses, clergy, business owners, and public housing
officials) and half by posting fliers on public phone booths or personally contacting
mothers on street corners. All mothers had incomes putting them below the poverty
line in the previous year. Edin and Kefalas tried to get a mixture: 50 Whites, 50 African
Americans, and 50 Puerto Ricans, and tried to get one-half over 25 and one-half under
25 years old. They eventually had 162 mothers, 52 whites, 63 African American, and 47
Puerto Rican. Only 40 were over 25 years old, but ages ranged from 15 to 56. They say,
“The resulting sample is not random or representative but is quite heterogeneous” (238).

Sample A small set of cases a researcher selects from
a large pool and generalizes to the population.
Free download pdf