Latino immigration
Journal 3
In the study of Latino immigration, there will be an independent and dependent variable that is involved in the study. The independent variable is the illegal immigration of Latino (it is because one chooses to focus on illegal immigration only). Whereas the dependent variable is access to health insurance and lack of jobs (this is the dependent variable because it is what is expected to happen in case one migrates illegally) (Holmes et al., 2016). Hence, the illegal immigration of Latinos has a significant influence on whether one gets insurance covers or even gets a job. There are no things that might in the way of the dependent variables and independent variables.
Journal entry 4
I would collect data from those Latino immigrants that have done it illegally. I would find them in the city since most of the illegal Latino immigrants target the cities in the countries they move to. They would be illegal Latino immigrants. I will need to find people within a certain group. I will only focus on illegal Latino immigrants. I will use random selection criteria where every illegal Latino immigration individual will entirely be chosen by chance. This means that every member of the relevant population is presented with equal chances of being selected for the study. Random criteria will help in the elimination of biasness since it gives all the people the same chances (Morse, & Mosher, 2016).
Further, I will not have any comparison group, but instead, I will only focus on illegal Latino immigrants. The collection of the data will involve more than one time in the course of a month. For any research to be effective, there is a need to make it intense and accurate, and this requires enough time to approximations but instead do one on one data collection.
References
Holmes, T. J., & Smith, R. A. (2016). Issue Brief: The Truth About Latino Immigration.
Morse, L., & Mosher, S. M. (2016). U.S. Patent No. 9,230,029. Washington, DC: U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.