TL;DR: In this article, the problem of selecting a sample adequate for a given research problem is discussed, in the sense that a sample can be viewed as adequate if and only if the sampling errors that result from the use of the stated sample size is so small as not to nullify conclusions reached by the researcher.
Abstract: Sampling problem can be contextualized as one of selecting a sample adequate for a given research problem. In most qualitative investigations, the problem associated with sampling is ever present and needs to be addressed in order ensure the credibility of research findings and undertakings. It happens to be the case that in most qualitative research, it is either impossible or costly prohibitive to study all cases of a phenomenon depending on the object of one’s research. This situation places limitation on the researcher in which she is compelled to select a certain proportion as the sample of study. The notion of adequate sampling comes into play, in the sense that a sample can be viewed as adequate if and only if the sampling errors that result from the use of the stated sample size is so small as not to nullify conclusions reached by the researcher. Sampling problem may be addressed in a number of ways. That is, to ensure that the sample size for a given study is adequate as well as representative of the universe of research study, the researcher needs to ensure that the sample is adequate so that conclusions drawn from the investigation would not be invalidated as a result of intolerable level of sampling error.
Abstract: This paper reports on findings of a survey of driver management techniques by motor carriers identified as "best safety performers" in order to identify key practices that affect safety performance. The objective was to systematically characterize these behaviors to make them easier for others to adopt. The survey looked at a geographically stratified judgment sample of the safest trucking companies in the U.S. and asked for driver and vehicle-related practices, especially in relation to training and hiring drivers and techniques to reinforce safe behaviors. The findings suggest the prevalence of certain types of practices among this elite group of safety-conscious firms. They tend to screen consistently in all driver-hiring situations, emphasize pre-service and in-service training for company and owner-operator drivers alike, use an array of training methods, covering a wide range of topics, and give a variety of awards to drivers who show they are safe practitioners. Future research needs to be done to see how strong the connection is between these practices and actual crash rates, driver out-of-service rates, and other measures. This could be done by administering the survey to a random sample of carriers drawn from a pool of poor, fair, good and excellent safety records. Empirical testing of that data would show how closely driver-targeted interventions correlate to overall safety.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors developed and tested a model in which exercise mediated by emotional intelligence and trust can result in increased job satisfaction and organizational commitment of frontline hotel workers, and found that frequent exercise among hotel workers leads to higher levels of emotional intelligence among them.
Abstract: Purpose – The purpose of this study is to develop and test a model in which exercise, mediated by emotional intelligence and trust, can result in increased job satisfaction and organizational commitment of frontline hotel workers.Design/methodology/approach – Data for this study were collected from a judgment sample of frontline workers at nine full‐service hotels in South Korea. A total of 210 questionnaires were retrieved.Findings – This study finds that: frequent exercise among hotel workers leads to higher levels of emotional intelligence among them; this emotional intelligence then spawns increased cognition‐based trust in their managers, affect‐based trust in their managers, and overall job satisfaction; the heightened level of cognition‐based trust also has a direct path to overall job satisfaction; and overall job satisfaction results in bolstered organizational commitment.Research limitations/implications – It could prove informative for future research to investigate the relationships between th...
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed a sampling procedure governed by the laws of chance to evaluate the statistical errors associated with an index number, which would have the further advantage of being in conformity with the modern statistical trend towards the replacement of judgment samples by probability samples.
Abstract: T HE importance of fluctuations in index numbers as guides to the formulation of economic policy decisions hardly requires emphasis. Changes in Federal Reserve policy, for example, are based, at least in part, upon price level variations, as measured either by the BLS consumer price index or by the index of wholesale prices. Similarly, many of the economic time series used by the Council of Economic Advisers as indicators of the state of the economy or of fundamental trends within the system are index numbers. And, to an ever increasing extent, the incomes of significant portions of our economy are adjusted periodically in response to movements in price indexes. In spite of this situation, these indexes, which underlie so much of our economic life, are basically inadequate as quantitative measures of change. For, first of all, the solution to the problem of correct weighting of the members of the sample is not at all obvious.' But, in addition, the construction of an index number is normally associated with the selection, on an a priori basis, of the sample of commodities which is to be utilized in the evaluation of the index.2 The use of such a judgment sample precludes the determination of the extent to which an observed difference in two indexes can be ascribed to sampling errors, rather than to real causes. This defect is extremely important, since index numbers are generally employed for intertemporal, interregional, or intersectoral comparisons, where differences are often quite small, and their significance correspondingly uncertain. Furthermore, the use of an arbitrary fixed sample permits neither changes in product quality nor the introduction or disappearance of consumer products readily to be incorporated into the standard type of index. Any attempt to take such effects into account must of necessity impair the continuity of the index through time. At present, the author knows of no method in use which will allow the realistic evaluation of the statistical errors associated with an index number. In view of the practical significance of this problem, it is suggested in this paper that the items used in the computation of an index be chosen in a statistical manner. The use of a probabilistic sample would, in principle at least, remove all the above mentioned deficiencies inherent in the normal method of sample selection. And, while the proposed procedure would not solve the problem of appropriate weighting, it would have the further advantage of being in conformity with the modern statistical trend towards the replacement of judgment samples by probability samples. In order to test whether the use of a sampling procedure governed by the laws of chance would lead to unforeseen practical complications, it seemed advantageous to apply the method suggested, on a small scale, to a more or less realistic situation. Among other information which could be gained from a preliminary investigation of this nature would be an estimate of the magnitude of the sampling variance, as well as hints regarding the difficulties and problems which might arise in full-scale application. * The author is indebted for valuable comments to Professors W. L. Crum, R. Dorfman, E. H. Huntington, and G. Kuznetz. The Bureau of Business and Economic Research, University of California, Berkeley, kindly financed the study, and Mr. Kenneth J. Oberman aided in the research. 1 For a discussion of this problem see R. Frisch, "Some Basic Principles of Price of Living Measurements," Econometrica, xxii (October I954), 505 f.; and M. J. Ulmer, The Economic Theory of Cost of Living Index Numbers (New York, I949). 2 Thus, in describing the procedure employed for the selection of the list of goods included in the index, the BLS writes: "In I950 and I95I the Bureau priced and studied the price changes of hundreds of items. Using this information and extensive price records of the past, the Bureau selected about 300 items, which together can be used to estimate the average change in prices of all items in the 'market basket.'" U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, "The Consumer Price Index as revised, I953," Bulletin II40 ('953), 3.