National Congregations Study Method
The National Congregations Study (NCS) method solves a hard sampling problem: there is no complete list of all the congregations in a country, so they cannot be sampled directly. Mark Chaves and colleagues addressed this with hypernetwork (multiplicity) sampling - drawing a representative sample of individuals, asking those who attend services to name their congregation, and treating each named congregation as a sampled unit. Because a congregation is named in proportion to the number of people who attend it, this procedure automatically yields a sample of congregations with probability proportional to size, from which leaders are then interviewed. First fielded in 1998 and described in the 1999 Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion article, and repeated in later waves summarized in Chaves and Eagle's 2015 report, the NCS has become the standard way to produce nationally representative data on American congregations.
Registre font
Les citacions es copien textualment del registre font del mètode. No s'infereix cap verificació a nivell de reclam d'elles.
- Chaves, M., Konieczny, M. E., Beyerlein, K., & Barman, E. (1999). The National Congregations Study: Background, Methods, and Selected Results. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 38(4), 458-476. · DOI 10.2307/1387606
- Chaves, M., & Eagle, A. (2015). Religious Congregations in 21st Century America. Durham, NC: Department of Sociology, Duke University (National Congregations Study). · URL
Reclamacions curades
Les reclamacions s'han persistit al registre de proves, cadascuna amb la seva pròpia avaluació.
Aquesta vista no inventa una avaluació de reclam quan el registre no en té cap.
Mètodes relacionats
Generat a partir del gràfic de mètodes i mostrat com a relacions suggerides per la màquina; no s'infereix cap reclamació d'evidència.