| Sampling IssuesWhat population is the survey investigating? While several restrictions
  were placed on the demographics of the respondees, i.e. only Christian, the
  voluntary nature of the eliciting process, along with the undefined nature of
  the group to which the survey was advertised, makes delineation of a larger
  population of interest intractable. As with the previous coin example, to be
  able to make inferences about a larger group, we must understand the
  relationship between the likelihood of making an observation and the nature of
  the observation itself. For example, if we wish to make inferences about the opinions of students
  attending SPU, we need to come up with a sampling strategy through which we
  can understand the relationship between sampling likelihood and sample
  outcome. To avoid making extra work, one often would like a sampling scheme
  such that  the parameter estimates from the samples will be an unbiased
  estimate of the population parameters. One such simple strategy is that of
  simple random sampling. In this situation, there is an equal likelihood of
  sampling from any given student at SPU. There are, of course, a range of
  sampling strategies for a variety of situations. Obtaining a representative sample may be difficult; if one were to go to an
  institution and collect surveys from volunteers, one could run into a problem
  in which people who volunteer and complete a survey do not have opinions which
  are representative of the larger population. And one suspects that such could
  be the case for the topics of Christian faith and evolution. (For example,
  people with strong opinions may be more likely to volunteer to take a survey
  than those with weak or conflicted opinions.) If, however, one could, with
  uniform randomness, select a pool of students at an institution and elicit
  their opinions, with a very low rate of refusal, then, one would be in a
  position to make inferences about the larger group. Email
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| Contributed by: David Caccia |