Research ch 8

  1. The entire set of subjects that are of interest to the researcher
    Population
  2. A carefully selected subset of the population that refelcts the composition of that population
    Sample
  3. A statistical value that indicates differences in results found in the sample compared to the population from which the sample was drawn
    Sampling error
  4. In quantitative study the sampling strategy is aimed at maximizing the potential for generalization or the ability to apply the findings to larger groups
  5. A condition that occurs when subjects are selected for a study or assigned in groups in a way that is not impartial. This may pose a threat to the validity of the study. Controlled almost exclusively by a sound sampling strategy.
    Selection bias
  6. Having an adequate number of subjects provides the study with power
  7. The ability to detect effects
    Power
  8. The first step of a sampling strategy is:
    To clearly define the population of interest
  9. The potential participants who meet the definition of the populatino and are accessible to the researcher
    Sampling frame
  10. The selection strategy involves making decisions about how subjects will be recruited, selected, and if appropirate, assigned to groups.
  11. The goal of the selection strategy is to:
    • Prevent bias
    • Support validity of the study
    • Enhance credibility of the results
  12. A homogenous sample is one in which the subjects are very similar in characteristics, and it makes generalizing to other populations difficult
  13. In qualitative research, the goal of selection strategy is credibility rather than generalizability so selection methods are purposive
  14. Guidelines for choosing subjects with a predetermined set of characteristics that include major factors important to the research question
    Inclusion criteria
  15. Characteristics that eliminate a potential subject from the study.
    Exclusion criteria
  16. A technique used in qualitative reserarch in which the subjects are selected because they possess certain characteristics that enhance the credibility of the study
    Purposive selection
  17. Quantitative samples are best when they are selected and assigned to groups randomly
  18. A sampling process used in quantitative research in which every member of the available population has an equal probability of being selected for the sample
    Probability or random sampling
  19. The only way to be sure a sample represents a population is if it incorporates two essential criteria:
    • Each member of the pop has an equal probability of selection for the sample
    • Each subject selection is an independent event
  20. A condition that occurs when the selection of one subject has no influence on selection of other subjects; each member of the population has exactly the same chance of being in the sample
    Independence
  21. Samples are structured so that important characteristics are evenly distributed across all groups
    Stratified random sampling
  22. Sample in which the first subject is drawn randomly and the remaining subjects are selected at predetermined intervals
    Systematic random sampling
  23. Researcher randomly selects entire groups and then randomly selects subjects from only those groups
    Cluster random sampling
  24. A nonprobability method of selecting a sample that includes subjects who are available conveniently to the researcher
    Convenience sampling
  25. Sampling is used when a table of random numbers is used to select subjects rom the sampling frame.
    Simple random sampling
  26. A nonprobability sampling method that relies on referrals from the initial subjects to recruit additional subjects
    Snowball or referral sampling
  27. The definition of the major entity or subject that will be analyzed in the study
    Unit of analysis
  28. The standard for a sample size in a qualitative study is:
    The achievement of saturation
  29. Saturation has been achieved when the researcher concludes that responses are repetitive, and no new info is being generated.
  30. An analysis that indicates how large a sample is needed to adequately detect a difference in the outcome variable
    Power
  31. Big effects are easier to see in the data, just as a large object is easier to see than a small one
  32. This error occurs when there is a difference between groups but the researcher does not detect it. (The intervention works but researchers do not detect it)
    Type II error
  33. The ability to generalize the findings from a research study to other populations, places, and situations.
    External validity
  34. The link between finding knowledge through research and using knowledge in practice
    External validity
  35. A type of external validity where the findings can be generalized and applied to other settings
    Ecological validity
  36. A type of external validity where the findings can be generalized and applied to other subjects
    Population validity
  37. Subjects who have a personal interest in the study are more likely to complete it. A combination of personal enthusiasm and nurturing by the researcher is often necessary to keep subjects in a study.
  38. Samples with at least 80% power are desirable
  39. If statistical significance was achieved, the sample had sufficient power
Author
jbrodie727
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93963
Card Set
Research ch 8
Description
Research ch 8
Updated