You are on page 1of 3

Q-1 After 2003, the Indian economy has shown high macro-economic growth figures.

The various industries, IT, infrastructure have come in various metropolitan city. FII inflows huge. Now govt of india has given signal for FDI. So, there will huge women absorption in all sectors. Govt of india and also state govt has been giving importance to women from education to politics. So, Indian women are empowered in each filed. With 25% the female share in the organised sector is low. In both manufacturing and in commercial services about one in six employees was female. The public sector is by far the largest employer in the formal sector, employing 70% of all women engaged in that sector. But in Indian culture, even women are in politics or in corporate sector, the are more keen to keep house wife culture. Now india is moving towards modern culture. And in same time, the economic has be increased manifold but special in metropolitan city. If this assignment is given for study of womens value and attitude, employment, like and dislike of household along with their education and other income source. I will proceed in following manner. 1. Define problem means objective of survey or research- to know the status of Indian modern women 2. Developing research plan- Follow descriptive research method- womens potential on household, their economic status, means detail of information to be collected 3. For collecting information, Design question based on organisation requirement 4. Data collection from field surveyeducational institute etc. womens those are in mall, corporate, womens

5. Secondary data from womens organisation like centre of womens development studies, Govt of India, Dept of statistics etc. 6. All collected data are collected and studied, analysed, and report prepared.

Limitation: Only metropolitan cities are surveyed Time and man power is limited Like and dislike of women, so it only in metropolitan cities.

Q-2 Type of information to be collected

Primary data- i.e social survey - the questionnaires are prepared based on Employment or not Other income source Like and dislike of household Their family background and Education Statistics of household like TV, Fridge, vehicle, house etc.

Interviews: informal or structured Secondary data Published statistics: census, housing and social security data, Published texts: theoretical work, secondary analyses by experts and reports Media: documentaries for example, as a source of information Organisation like centre of womens social studies etc.

The data are to be collected from target group like women.

Q-3 Sample design Sample design covers the method of selection, the sample structure and plans for analysing and interpreting the results. Sample designs can vary from simple to complex and depend on the type of information required and the way the sample is selected. sample design is random selection. This permits justifiable inference from the sample to the population, at quantified levels of precision. Random selection also helps guard against sample bias in a way that selecting by judgement or convenience cannot. Sample Size For this survey, sample design deciding upon the appropriate sample size will depend on several key factors (1) No estimate taken from a sample is expected to be exact: Any assumptions about the overall population based on the results of a sample will have an attached margin of error. The target sample is women from only metropolitan cities. (2) To lower the margin of error usually requires a larger sample size. The amount of variability in the population (i.e. the range of values or opinions) will also affect accuracy and therefore the size of sample. (3) The confidence level is the likelihood that the results obtained from the sample lie within a required precision. The higher the confidence level, that is the more certain you wish to be that the

results are not atypical. Statisticians often use a 95 per cent confidence level to provide strong conclusions. (4) Population size does not normally affect sample size. In fact the larger the population size the lower the proportion of that population that needs to be sampled to be representative. It is only when the proposed sample size is more than 5 per cent of the population that the population size becomes part of the formulae to calculate the sample size. In cities like Mumbai, Kolakata, Banaglore, Delhi, Chennai may be sample size is large and population is large but confidence level remain is same with respect to the cities. S= (Z/e)^2 Where Z- degree of confidence, normal variate assume 95% i.e 1.96 e- error that has to accept. Assume 10 %

sample size S = (1.96/0.01)^2 = 385 it indicates that minimum 385 women should be samples to meet our criterion.

Q-4 DUMMY TABLE Place-Delhi, Mall- XYZ No of Education women between employed Graduation Annual 10th- Income No of No of TV Children No of Vehicle

You might also like