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1. What is the difference between a population and a sample?

User Radeklos
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2 Answers

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population is the entire group that you want to draw conclusions about.

A sample is the specific group that you will collect data from. The size of the sample is always less than the total size of the population.

In research, a population doesn’t always refer to people. It can mean a group containing elements of anything you want to study, such as objects, events, organizations, countries, species, organisms, etc.

To summarize: your sample is the group of individuals who participate in your study, and your population is the broader group of people to whom your results will apply. As an analogy, you can think of your sample as an aquarium and your population as the ocean. Your sample is small portion of a vaster ocean that you are attempting to understand.

Hope this helps
User Pincoin
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6 votes

Answer:

is the entire group that you want to draw conclusion about A sample is the specific group that you will collect data from the size of the sample is always less than the total size of the population.

User Gediminas Zimkus
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