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Direction: Read the following Passage and Answer the Questions.
If the data have been collected and processed (scrutinised and tabulated) by some other agency, they are called Secondary Data. They can be obtained either from published sources such as government reports, documents, newspapers, books written by economists or from any other source, for example, a website. Thus, the data are primary to the source that collects and processes them for the first time and secondary for all sources that later use such data. Use of secondary data saves time and cost. For example, after collecting the data on the popularity of the filmstar among students, you publish a report. If somebody uses the data collected by you for a similar study, it becomes secondary data.
Q1: How are secondary data defined, and what distinguishes them from primary data?
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Q2: What are the potential sources of secondary data mentioned in the passage?
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Q3: What are the advantages of using secondary data in research or analysis, as highlighted in the passage?
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Direction: Read the following Passage and Answer the Questions.
Closed-ended or structured questions can either be a two-way question or a multiple choice question. When there are only two possible answers, ‘yes’ or ‘no’, it is called a two way question. When there is a possibility of more than two options of answers, multiple choice questions are more appropriate. Closed-ended questions are easy to use, score and to codify for analysis, because all respondents can choose from the given options.
Q1: What are closed-ended or structured questions, and how can they be categorized based on the number of possible answers?
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Q2: What are the advantages of using closed-ended questions in surveys or research?
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Q3: How is a two-way question different from a multiple choice question, and when might each type be more appropriate?
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Direction: Read the following Passage and Answer the Questions.
Personal interviews are preferred due to various reasons. Personal contact is made between the respondent and the interviewer. The interviewer has the opportunity of explaining the study and answering the queries of respondents. The interviewer can request the respondent to expand on answers that are particularly important. Misinterpretation and misunderstanding can be avoided. Watching the reactions of respondents can provide supplementary information.
Q1: Why are personal interviews often preferred in research, according to the passage?
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Q2: What advantages do personal interviews offer in terms of ensuring clarity and reducing potential issues in communication?
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Q3: How do personal interviews contribute to the overall quality of data collection and the research process?
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Direction: Read the following Passage and Answer the Questions.
When the data in a survey are collected by mail, the questionnaire is sent to each individual by mail with a request to complete and return it by a given date. The advantages of this method are that, it is less expensive. It allows the researcher to have access to people in remote areas too, who might be difficult to reach in person or by telephone. It does not allow influencing of the respondents by the interviewer. It also permits the respondents to take sufficient time to give thoughtful answers to the questions.
Q1: What is the method of collecting data by mail in a survey, as described in the passage?
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Q2: What are the advantages associated with collecting survey data by mail?
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Q3: Why is the absence of interviewer influence considered a benefit of collecting data by mail?
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Direction: Read the following Passage and Answer the Questions.
The pilot survey helps in providing a preliminary idea about the survey. It helps in pre-testing of the questionnaire, so as to know the shortcomings and drawbacks of the questions. Pilot survey also helps in assessing the suitability of questions, clarity of instructions, performance of enumerators and the cost and time involved in the actual survey.
Q1: What is the primary purpose of conducting a pilot survey, as mentioned in the passage?
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Q2: How does a pilot survey assist in the development of a questionnaire for the main survey?
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Q3: Besides questionnaire assessment, what other aspects of a survey does a pilot survey help evaluate?
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Direction: Read the following Passage and Answer the Questions.
A survey, which includes every element of the population, is known as Census or the Method of Complete Enumeration. If certain agencies are interested in studying the total population in India, they have to obtain information from all the households in rural and urban India. It is carried out every ten years. A house-to-house enquiry is carried out, covering all households in India. Demographic data on birth and death rates, literacy, employment, life expectancy, size and composition of population, etc., are collected and published by the Registrar General of India. The last Census of India was held in 2011.
Q1: What is a Census in the context of surveys, as described in the passage?
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Q2: How is a Census conducted in India, and what kind of information does it aim to collect?
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Q3: How frequently is the Census of India conducted, and who is responsible for collecting and publishing the gathered data?
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Direction: Read the following Passage and Answer the Questions.
A population is always all the individuals/items who possess certain characteristics (or a set of characteristics), according to the purpose of the survey. The first task in selecting a sample is to identify the population. Once the population is identified, the researcher selects a method of studying it. If the researcher finds that survey of the whole population is not possible, then he/ she may decide to select a Representative Sample.
Q1: What is the initial step in the process of selecting a sample for a survey, as explained in the passage?
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Q2: What is the alternative to surveying the entire population, and when might it be chosen?
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Q3: What role does the identification of the population play in the selection of a sample?
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Direction: Read the following Passage and Answer the Questions.
In random sampling, every individual has an equal chance of being selected. In the above example, all 300 sampling units (also called sampling frame) of the population got an equal chance of being included in the sample of 30 units and hence the sample, such drawn, is a random sample. This is also called lottery method. Nowadays computer programmes are used to select random samples.
Q1: What is random sampling, and what key principle governs the selection of individuals in a random sample?
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Q2: What is another term for random sampling, and what is its relevance to the selection process?
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Q3: How has technology impacted the process of selecting random samples in modern times?
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Direction: Read the following Passage and Answer the Questions.
A population consisting of numerical values has two important characteristics which are of relevance here. First, Central Tendency which may be measured by the mean, the median or the mode. Second, Dispersion, which can be measured by caculating the “standard deviation”, ‘‘ mean deviation”, “ range”, etc.
Q1: What are the two key characteristics of a population that are of relevance when dealing with numerical values?
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Q2: How can Central Tendency be measured in a population, and what are some common measures of it?
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Q3: What is Dispersion, and how can it be quantified in a population of numerical values?
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Direction: Read the following Passage and Answer the Questions.
The NSS was established by the Government of India to conduct nationwide surveys on socio-economic issues. The NSS does continuous surveys in successive rounds. The data collected by NSS are released through reports and its quarterly journal Sarvekshana. NSS provides periodic estimates of literacy, school enrolment utilisation of educational services, employment, unemployment, manufacturing and service sector enterprises, morbidity, maternity, child care, utilisation of the public distribution system etc.
Q1: What is the primary purpose of the National Sample Survey (NSS) in India, as mentioned in the passage?
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Q2: How does the NSS release the data it collects, and through what medium is the information made available to the public?
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Q3: What are some of the specific areas or topics for which the NSS provides periodic estimates through its surveys?
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