7.2 Sampling in Qualitative Research
7.2 Sampling in Qualitative Research
Qualitative researchers typically make sampling choices that enable them to deepen understanding
of whatever phenomenon it is that they are studying. In this section we’ll examine the strategies that
qualitative researchers typically employ when sampling as well as the various types of samples that
Nonprobability Sampling
So when are nonprobability samples ideal? One instance might be when we’re designing
a research project. For example, if we’re conducting survey research, we may want to
administer our survey to a few people who seem to resemble the folks we’re interested in
studying in order to help work out kinks in the survey. We might also use a
nonprobability sample at the early stages of a research project, if we’re conducting a
pilot study or some exploratory research. This can be a quick way to gather some initial
data and help us get some idea of the lay of the land before conducting a more extensive
study. From these examples, we can see that nonprobability samples can be useful for
setting up, framing, or beginning research. But it isn’t just early stage research that
relies on and benefits from nonprobability sampling techniques.
There are several types of nonprobability samples that researchers use. These include
purposive samples, snowball samples, quota samples, and convenience samples. While
the latter two strategies may be used by quantitative researchers from time to time, they
are more typically employed in qualitative research, and because they are both
nonprobability methods, we include them in this section of the chapter.
To draw a purposive sample, a researcher begins with specific perspectives in mind that
he or she wishes to examine and then seeks out research participants who cover that full
range of perspectives. For example, if you are studying students’ satisfaction with their
living quarters on campus, you’ll want to be sure to include students who stay in each of
the different types or locations of on-campus housing in your study. If you only include
students from 1 of 10 dorms on campus, you may miss important details about the
experiences of students who live in the 9 dorms you didn’t include in your study. In my
own interviews of young people about their workplace sexual harassment experiences, I
and my coauthors used a purposive sampling strategy; we used participants’ prior
responses on a survey to ensure that we included both men and women in the interviews
and that we included participants who’d had a range of harassment experiences, from
relatively minor experiences to much more severe harassment.
While purposive sampling is often used when one’s goal is to include participants who
represent a broad range of perspectives, purposive sampling may also be used when a
researcher wishes to include only people who meet very narrow or specific criteria. For
example, in their study of Japanese women’s perceptions of intimate partner violence,
Miyoko Nagae and Barbara L. Dancy (2010)Nagae, M., & Dancy, B. L. (2010). Japanese
women’s perceptions of intimate partner violence (IPV). Journal of Interpersonal
Violence, 25, 753–766. limited their study only to participants who had experienced
intimate partner violence themselves, were at least 18 years old, had been married and
living with their spouse at the time that the violence occurred, were heterosexual, and
were willing to be interviewed. In this case, the researchers’ goal was to find participants
who had had very specific experiences rather than finding those who had had quite
diverse experiences, as in the preceding example. In both cases, the researchers involved
shared the goal of understanding the topic at hand in as much depth as possible.
Let’s go back to the example we considered previously of student satisfaction with on-
campus housing. Perhaps there are two types of housing on your campus: apartments
that include full kitchens and dorm rooms where residents do not cook for themselves
but eat in a dorm cafeteria. As a researcher, you might wish to understand how
satisfaction varies across these two types of housing arrangements. Perhaps you have
the time and resources to interview 20 campus residents, so you decide to interview 10
from each housing type. It is possible as well that your review of literature on the topic
suggests that campus housing experiences vary by gender. If that is that case, perhaps
you’ll decide on four important subgroups: men who live in apartments, women who
live in apartments, men who live in dorm rooms, and women who live in dorm rooms.
Your quota sample would include five people from each subgroup.
Sample
Description
type
Purposive Researcher seeks out elements that meet specific criteria.
Snowball Researcher relies on participant referrals to recruit new participants.
Quota Researcher selects cases from within several different subgroups.
Convenience Researcher gathers data from whatever cases happen to be convenient.
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1 Sampling for Qualitative Research
Assoc. Prof. Dr. Şehnaz Şahinkarakaş
3 Sample SizeWhat is an appropriate sample size for qualitative research?It depends: the size that
adequately answers the research questionFor single questions or detailed studies: single sampleFor
complex questions: larger samples
5 Theoretical SamplingThe process of data collection for generating theoryThe researcher jointly
collects, codes, and analyzes data and decides what data to collect next and where to find them, in
order to develop his/her theory as it emerges.i.e., it is an ongoing process rather than a distinct and
single stage
10
Sample
Description
type
Purposive Researcher seeks out elements that meet specific criteria.
Sample
Description
type
Snowball Researcher relies on participant referrals to recruit new participants.
Quota Researcher selects cases from within several different subgroups.
Convenience Researcher gathers data from whatever cases happen to be convenient.
: Sampling a crucial case that permits a logical inference about the phenomenon of interest. i.e., It is
where you collect samples that are most likely to give you the information you’re looking for--They
are particularly important cases or ones that highlight vital information.For example, a case might be
chosen precisely because it is anticipated that it might allow a theory to be tested.Maximum variation
sample: to ensure as wide a variation as possible in terms of the dimension ofinterest.Used whenyou
want to understand how different groups of people view a specific topic.You know little about the
population (and so find it difficult or impossible to get a random sample).Random sampling is
otherwise not practical (because of logistics or a small population).You want your sample to be as
representative as possible; by sampling the extremes, together they may represent an “average”
respondent.
12 Stratified purposive (quota) sampling: Sampling of usually typical cases or individuals within
subgroups of interest.Generally used in mixed methodsKey informant sampling: Selecting people
who know about a population of interest rather than from members of that population
themselves.May reduce the participant’s reluctance to report unusual behaviours
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3 Sample SizeWhat is an appropriate sample size for qualitative research?It depends: the size that
adequately answers the research questionFor single questions or detailed studies: single sampleFor
complex questions: larger samples
5 Theoretical SamplingThe process of data collection for generating theoryThe researcher jointly
collects, codes, and analyzes data and decides what data to collect next and where to find them, in
order to develop his/her theory as it emerges.i.e., it is an ongoing process rather than a distinct and
single stage
10 Critical case sampling: Sampling a crucial case that permits a logical inference about the
phenomenon of interest. i.e., It is where you collect samples that are most likely to give you the
information you’re looking for--They are particularly important cases or ones that highlight vital
information.For example, a case might be chosen precisely because it is anticipated that it might
allow a theory to be tested.Maximum variation sample: to ensure as wide a variation as possible in
terms of the dimension ofinterest.Used whenyou want to understand how different groups of people
view a specific topic.You know little about the population (and so find it difficult or impossible to get a
random sample).Random sampling is otherwise not practical (because of logistics or a small
population).You want your sample to be as representative as possible; by sampling the extremes,
together they may represent an “average” respondent.
11 Criterion sampling: Selecting cases that meet some predetermined criterion of importance
Can be usedfor identifying and understanding cases that are information rich.to provide an important
qualitative component to quantitative data.for identifying cases from a standardized questionnaire
that might be useful for follow-up.Snowball sampling: Selecting cases by asking other participants to
call other cases. It is used where potential participants are hard to find. It’s called snowball sampling
because (in theory) once you have the ball rolling, it picks up more “snow” along the way and
becomes larger and larger.
12 Stratified purposive (quota) sampling: Sampling of usually typical cases or individuals within
subgroups of interest.Generally used in mixed methodsKey informant sampling: Selecting people
who know about a population of interest rather than from members of that population
themselves.May reduce the participant’s reluctance to report unusual behaviours
onfirming cases). This can help the research team understand and define the limitations of research
findings