Basic Quantitative Analysis Methods
This type of statistical analysis method sees how each person who responded in a certain way to a question responds to another question or the tendency of responses depending on the attribution. For instance, by creating a table (a cross-tabulation) composed of two variables: 1) the row variable is “practice of hand-washing”; and 2) the column variable is “the participation in the hygiene campaign,” we can estimate the frequency or the ratio of people who practice hand-washing based on whether they participated in the campaign. This method is useful for comparing a target group with a project and a control group without any project to examine the influences of a project on different groups.
Another example is determining whether religious Blacks are more likely (or less likely) to be militant than nonreligious Blacks. Perhaps the most straightforward approach is to cross-tabulate militancy by religiosity, that is, to count the frequency of persons with each combination of religiosity and militancy. Using four religiosity categories and two militancy categories, there are eight combinations of the two variables.
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