Sampling
Bias
Experiment Elements
Design/Study
Random
100

People who volunteer to be in a sample. This is biased.

Voluntary Response Sample

100

Individuals selected for a sample cannot be reached.

Nonresponse 

100

The group of people who are given a placebo.

Control group

100

All experimental units are assigned to all of the treatments at random.

Completely randomized

100

Faith Christian School was founded during this year.

1993

200

Choosing individuals who are easy to reach.

Convivence Sampling

200

A group of the population is left out of the process when choosing a sample. 

Undercoverage 

200

A dummy treatment used to see if something works. Looks the same as the real treatment.

Placebo

200

When experimental units are separated by a common characteristic before being randomly assigned to treatments.

Block Design

200

Type of experiment when neither the subject nor the experimenter knows who has the treatment

Double-blind experiment

300

Divide population into group, perform a simple random sample in each group.

Stratified Random Sample

300

The respondent or interviewer cause the questions to be dishonest.

Response bias

300

When an observed outcome is too large to occur by chance.

Statistically significant

300

Only two treatments done, each group gets both treatments 

Matched pair design

300

What is being measured and used for comparison. 

Response variable

400

Gives each person in a population an equal chance to be selected.

SRS

400

Wording of the questions or choices cause the respondent to be confused or mislead. 

Wording effect

400

Three principles of experimental design

Control, randomization, replication

400

Applies a treatment to obtain a result. Observes the subject response when the treatment is administered. 

Experiment 

400

Specific values of a treatment

Level

500

Forms groups that are closely located and mirror the population, then samples the whole group that is randomly selected

Cluster Sample

500

This happens when lurking variables are not controlled and cause/effect can no longer be determined

Confounding

500

These are two challenges faced when trying to establish causation.

Lack of realism
Lack of practicality

500

Observes people and measures the variables of interest.

Observational study

500

These three high school teachers all graduated with bachelor's degrees from NC Wesleyan.

Mr. Carter, Mrs. Oskiera, and Mr. Smith

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