Lecture 3 SSTat A
Lecture 3 SSTat A
Lecture 3 SSTat A
CS
Prepared by
LICTAO, SHARON
SAMPLING TECHNIQUES
PA R A M E T E R A N D
S TAT I S T I C
-differentiate sample and
population
-illustrate random sampling
-distinguish between parameter
and statistic;
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P O P U L AT I O N
Example:
A study regarding the average height of
students in a school requires the set of all
students studying in that school as its
population.
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SAMPLE
This is the set of data drawn from the population.
Example:
A study regarding the average height of
students in a school may focus only on the
sample set of students in a single grade level
studying in that school.
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RESEARCHER-COMPLETED INSTRUMENTS
RESEARCHER-COMPLETED
INSTRUMENTS
Example:
Rating scales, interview schedules/guides, tally
sheets, flowcharts, performance checklists, time-
and-motion logs, and observation forms are some
examples of researcher-completed instruments
which are to be filled by the researcher.
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SAMPLING TECHNIQUES
RANDOM SAMPLING
• Analyze
Mrs. Dela Cruz wants to get the analysis on her pre-
test in Statistics and probability of grade 11 students in
ABC high school with 150 students in the subject.
Should she get the scores of one class only?
RANDOM SAMPLING
• Analysis
Mrs. Dela Cruz class is not that big, it is much better if
she will get the scores of her entire class to have an
analysis
The population refers to the whole group under study or
investigation. In research, the population does not always
refer to people. It may mean a group containing elements of
anything you want to study, such as objects, events,
organizations, countries, species, organisms, etc.