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Public Opinion Listening to Citizens. Understanding Public Opinion in the Context of American Politics Focus groups – Small gatherings of individuals.

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Presentation on theme: "Public Opinion Listening to Citizens. Understanding Public Opinion in the Context of American Politics Focus groups – Small gatherings of individuals."— Presentation transcript:

1 Public Opinion Listening to Citizens

2 Understanding Public Opinion in the Context of American Politics Focus groups – Small gatherings of individuals used to test ideas before marketing (p. 126-7). Elites – Individuals in a position of authority, often those with a higher level of education than the population at large (p. 127).

3 The Nature of Public Opinion Public Opinion – Opinions held by private individuals that governments find it prudent to heed (p. 127). Political Culture – The dominant values and beliefs of a political community (p. 127).

4 Changes in Assessing and Using Public Opinions Straw Polls – An unscientific survey of popular views (p. 129).

5 How Political Opinions Are Formed (POLITICAL SOCIALIZATION) The Process of Socialization – Life Cycle Effects (p. 129) – Generational Effects (p. 130) – Cohort (p. 130) Agents of Political Socialization (pp. 130-2) – Family – Educational Institutions – Religious Institutions – Voluntary Associations – Media

6 Group Differences in Political Opinions (pp. 132– 4) (Factors of Diversity) *Racial and *Ethnic Identity *Gender *Geography Age Religious Affiliation Sexual Orientation

7 Group Differences in Political Opinions (pp. 132– 4) (Factors of Diversity) Con’t. Education Occupation Income Wealth Social Economic Status (S.E.S)

8 Measuring Public Opinion Dimensions of Public Opinion – Direction (p. 134-5) – Salience (p. 134-5) – Intensity (p. 134-5) – Stability (p. 135) – Informational Support (p. 135)

9 Measuring Public Opinion Con’t. Types of Polls – Benchmark Survey (p. 135) – Trial Heat Survey (p. 135) – Tracking Polls (p. 135) – Push Poll (p. 135) – Exit Poll (p. 135)

10 Polling Techniques Who is Asked? Selecting the Sample – Scientific polls (p.136) – Sample (p. 136) – Population (p. 136) – Probability Sampling (p. 136) – Simple Random Sampling (pp. 136-7) – Systemic Sampling (pp. 136-7) – Sampling Error (pp. 136-7)

11 Polling Techniques Con’t. What is Asked? Paying Attention to the Questions – Leading Question (pp. 137-8) – Nonattitudes (p. 138)

12 The Content of American Public Opinion Political Cynicism (pp. 138-9) Political Efficacy (p. 140) Political Ideologies - A cohesive set of beliefs that form a general philosophy about the role of government (p. 141) – Liberalism (p. 141) – Conservatism (p. 141) – Populist (p. 142) – Libertarianism (p. 142) Ideologue (p. 142)


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