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I’m not sure what the answer is-example-1

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Answer:

The population is 300 the sample is the amount of people who responded.

= 300 ⇒300:138

this means sample unsatisfactory

as the sample was less than 50%

Explanation:

The population is viewed as 300/570

There are a number of different ways to handle this. One is to target a 100% response rate, although in doing this care has to be taken in how it is achieved to avoid biasing the responses by changing them! By way of a silly example, if I offered everyone who responds to the survey a lifetime’s supply of ice-cream to boost the response rate, and the survey includes questions about future purchases of ice-cream, that may well impact on the answers. Similarly, cajoling employees into completing an engagement survey may have a negative effect on their answers.

Non-response does not always have a negative effect on survey result (there is a large body of research in this area: Curtin, Presser, and Singer 2000 ; Keeter et al. 2000; , and Earl, “The Practice of Social Research”). Anything over 50% is usually sufficient, and over 70% is viewed as a very good response rate. There are a number of reasons for survey non-response:

Awareness (people were not aware of the survey due to communication failure).

Capability (people do not have the knowledge/competence/tools to complete the survey).

Motivation (people are aware and able, but unmotivated/unwilling/refusing).

User Dougcunha
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