QUALITATIVE AND QUANTITATIVE SAMPLING
NOTES
- See Stern (1979:77–81) and Beck (1983) on biased
samples. - Babbie (1998:196), Kalton (1983:91–93), and Sud-
man (1976a:191–200) discuss quota sampling. - For a discussion of the Literary Digestsampling error,
see Babbie (1998:192–194), Dillman (1978:9–10), Frey
(1983:18–19), and Singleton and colleagues (1988:
132–133). - See Traugott (1987) on the importance of persistence
in reaching sampled respondents for a representative
sample. Also see Kalton (1983:63–69) on the importance
of nonresponse. - Only one name appears in both. The stratified sample
has six males and four females; the simple random
sample has five males and five females. (Complete the
lower block of numbers and then begin at the far right of
the top block.) - Stratified sampling techniques are discussed in more
detail in Frankel (1983:37–46), Kalton (1983:19–28),
Mendenhall and associates (1971:53–88), Sudman
(1976a:107–130), and Williams (1978:162–175). - Cluster sampling is discussed in Frankel (1983:
47–57), Kalton (1983:28–38), Kish (1965), Mendenhall
and associates (1971:121–141, 171–183), Sudman
(1976a: 69–84), and Williams (1978:144–161). - For a discussion, see Frankel (1983:57–62), Kalton
(1983:38–47), Sudman (1976a:131–170), and Williams
(1978:239–241). - Czaja and associates (1982) and Groves and Kahn
(1979:32–36) discuss within-household sampling. - For more on random-digit dialing issues, see Dill-
man (1978:238–242), Frey (1983:69–77), Glasser and
Metzger (1972), Groves and Kahn (1979:20–21, 45–63),
Kalton (1983:86–90), and Waksberg (1978). Kviz (1984)
reported that telephone directories can produce relatively
accurate sampling frames in rural areas, at least for mail
questionnaire surveys. Also see Keeter (1995). - See Grosof and Sardy (1985:181–185), Kalton
(1983: 82–90), Kraemer and Thiemann (1987), Sudman
(1976a:85–105), and Williams (1978: 211–227) for a
technical discussion of selecting a sample size. - For further discussion on purposive sampling, see
Babbie (1998:195), Grosof and Sardy (1985:172–173),
and Singleton and associates (1988:153–154, 306). Bai-
ley (1987:94–95) describes “dimensional” sampling,
which is a variation of purposive sampling. - Snowball sampling is discussed in Babbie
(1998:194–196), Bailey (1987:97), and Sudman
(1976a:210–211). For discussions of sociometry and
sociograms, also see Bailey (1987:366–367), Dooley
(1984:86–87), Kidder and Judd (1986:240–241),
Lindzey and Byrne (1968:452–525), and Singleton and
associates (1988:372–373). Network sampling issues are
discussed in Galaskiewicz (1985), Granovetter (1976),
and Hoffmann-Lange (1987). - On adaptive sampling, see Martsolf et al. (2006),
Thompson and Geber (1996), Thompson (2002), and
Thompson and Collins (2002).