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Quota sampling

Quota sampling is a non-probability method that fills fixed quotas for a population's subgroups, such as age or gender, without randomly selecting who fills each quota, so it cannot support formal confidence intervals.

ByHoang TruongUpdated

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A firm sets quotas of 300 respondents aged 18 to 40 and 200 over 40, matching the city's known age split, then interviewers fill each quota with whoever is willing at a shopping centre. Because no random draw picks who fills a quota, unlike stratified random sampling, the result cannot support a formally calculated confidence interval.

Where it fits
TopicFoundations: Data, Populations & SamplingCoreSubjectData Analysis & StatisticsCore

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PracticeCORE

A market research firm samples 500 people from a city, setting quotas of 300 aged 18-40 and 200 aged over 40 to match known population proportions. Interviewers approach people at a shopping centre until each quota is filled, with no random selection within either age group. Which statement about the resulting sample is correct?

Select an answer to check your understanding.