Difference between revisions of "Multi-stage (Cluster) Sampling"

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Most impact evaluations rely on a multi-stage sampling design. This is when the unit of treatment assignment differs from the unit of survey respondent. For example, for an intervention assigned at the village level (treatment villages receive an intervention, control villages do not), the first stage of the sample would be village-level, and the second stage would be household-level (to select survey respondents).
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== Guidelines ==
== Guidelines ==
* organize information on the topic into subsections. for each subsection, include a brief description / overview, with links to articles that provide details
 
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Revision as of 22:28, 27 October 2017

Most impact evaluations rely on a multi-stage sampling design. This is when the unit of treatment assignment differs from the unit of survey respondent. For example, for an intervention assigned at the village level (treatment villages receive an intervention, control villages do not), the first stage of the sample would be village-level, and the second stage would be household-level (to select survey respondents).


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This article is part of the topic Sampling & Power Calculations


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