Voting and Opinion Forming 11/7/2011. Clearly Communicated Learning Objectives in Written Form Upon completion of this course, students will be able to:

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Public Opinion Chapter 7 Part 1. I.What is public opinion? A.How people think or feel about particular things B.People do not spend a great deal of time.
Advertisements

Data Collection 11/27/2012. Readings Chapter 8 Correlation and Linear Regression (Pollock) (pp ) Chapter 6 Foundations of Statistical Inference.
About BIAS…. Bias A systematic error in measuring the estimateA systematic error in measuring the estimate favors certain outcomesfavors certain outcomes.
Causes of Error in Sampling. Sampling Error Sampling error is error caused by the way you chose your sample – Volunteer Sampling & Convenience Sampling.
Chapter 12 Sample Surveys. At the end of this chapter, you should be able to Identify populations, samples, parameters and statistics for a given problem.
1.Pick up an article and notes packet 2.Journal the article 3.Notes over Measuring Public Opinion 4. Crossword/Review You will be able to describe the.
Voting 11/9/2011. Clearly Communicated Learning Objectives in Written Form Upon completion of this course, students will be able to: – discuss and critically.
Do Now If you were to take a poll of V.C. students, what do you think would be the overall opinion of: School Lunch (Does it need improvement, why/why.
PUBLIC OPINION AND POLITICAL SOCIALIZATION
Public Opinion/Mass Media
BY TERESA CHATEL ESSENTIAL QUESTIONS 3.1 AND 3.2.
Public Opinion, Participation, and Voting
BULLSEYE VOCABULARY UNIT 2. Political Culture, Political Socialization, Particiapation Good Luck on your Test!!!!
4.2 Statistics Notes What are Good Ways and Bad Ways to Sample?
MASS MEDIA & PUBLIC OPINION Chapter 8-9. Public Opinion  Public opinion  Attitudes held by a significant number of people concerning political issues.
Famous Quotes There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies and statistics. Benjamin Disraeli Figures don’t lie; liars figure. Mark Twain Statistics.
Sampling 12/4/2012. Readings Chapter 8 Correlation and Linear Regression (Pollock) (pp ) Chapter 6 Foundations of Statistical Inference (Pollock)
Voting 11/2/2011. Clearly Communicated Learning Objectives in Written Form Upon completion of this course, students will be able to: – discuss and critically.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Longman. The 1936 Literary Digest Presidential Election Poll Case Study: Special Topic Lecture Chapter.
Lesson Objectives: By the end of this lesson you will be able to: 1.Examine the problem of nonvoting in America. 2.Identify those people who typically.
Surveys and Sampling. Midpoint/Don’t Know Midpoint- allows for neutral response Advantage- might be more accurate Advantage- might be more accurate Disadvantage-
National Anthem.  Although America is very diverse, it is united under a common political culture.  A political culture is a common set of beliefs and.
Political Beliefs and Behaviors I Chapter 5 Public Opinion and Political Socialization.
Public Opinion? Chapter 7. Public Opinion and Democracy If we are a government “of, by, and for the people” why do they do so many things we don’t agree.
Partisanship and Group Voting POLS 4349 Dr. Brian William Smith.
Chapter Six: Public Opinion and Political Socialization 1.
Chapter 6 Public Opinion, Political Socialization and Media.
Public Opinion. What is Public Opinion? Pollsters want to know what Americans are thinking Can we trust American public opinion if Americans don't necessarily.
PUBLIC OPINION Public opinion is the aggregate of individual attitudes or beliefs. Public opinion can also be defined as the complex collection of opinions.
Chapter 12 Sample Surveys *Sample *Bias *Randomizing *Sample Size.
What we believe? Or what we are told we believe? Public Opinion and the Media.
Random and Non-Random samples 12/3/2013. Readings Chapter 6 Foundations of Statistical Inference (Pollock) (pp )
Public Opinion, Mass Media, and Interest Groups Chapter 11 Section 1, 2, and 3.
Voting III 4/3/2012. Clearly Communicated Learning Objectives in Written Form Upon completion of this course, students will be able to: – identify and.
American National Government Spring 2012 Dr. Smith.
Interest Groups 4/19/2012. Clearly Communicated Learning Objectives in Written Form Upon completion of this course, students will be able to: – discuss.
Chapter 6 Public Opinion and Political Socialization.
THE AMERICAN POLITICAL SYSTEM LECTURE 8 POLITICAL SOCIALIZATION AND PUBLIC OPINION.
Chapter 6 Review. 1. What are crosscutting cleavages.
Public Opinion. What is Public Opinion Definition: The distribution of the population’s beliefs about politics and policy issues When there is a generally.
Unit 2 Vocabulary Review for Test Chapter 4 Political Culture and Ideology Vocabulary.
Political Parties 4/12/2012. Clearly Communicated Learning Objectives in Written Form Upon completion of this course, students will be able to: – discuss.
Random Samples 12/5/2013. Readings Chapter 6 Foundations of Statistical Inference (Pollock) (pp )
Political Socialization and Political Trust Dr. Brian William Smith.
Elections, Campaigns, & Voting The who, what, when, where, why, and how of political participation.
Public Opinion Public opinion concerns the attitudes or perceptions that the American public have on issues that face the United States.
Participation and Voting Pols Dr. Brian William Smith.
Bell Work, Friday 4/17 How much money does SpaceX receive from NASA? Which former president was assassinated on April 14 th, 1865? What is the name of.
Mass Media and Public Opinion Chapter 8. The Formation of Public Opinion Section 1.
Mass Media and Public Opinion Chapter 8. MEASURING PUBLIC OPINION Section 2.
Political Parties 4/17/2012. Clearly Communicated Learning Objectives in Written Form Upon completion of this course, students will be able to: – discuss.
Public Opinion and Democracy A key goal of the Framers was to give people an active voice in government. Another goal of the Framers was to protect government.
Public Opinion and Mass Media. The Formation of Public Opinion What is Public Opinion? Those attitudes held by a significant number of people on matters.
 Electing the President  Election days are held the Tuesday after the first Monday in November  Elections  Every 4 years a president is elected  1/3.
The Two Party System. Political Parties Political Parties are not mentioned in the Constitution and our founders feared that political parties would lead.
Causes of Error in Sampling. Sampling Error Sampling error is error caused by the way you chose your sample – Volunteer Sampling & Convenience Sampling.
BELLWORK What is public opinion? (Page 514). REMINDER (Periods 3, 4, 6 & 7) Chapter 18 Assessment: 1-20 Pages Due Thursday, April 16th.
Presentation Pro © 2001 by Prentice Hall, Inc. Magruder’s American Government C H A P T E R 8 Mass Media and Public Opinion.
PUBLIC OPINION Chapter 6. The Power of Public Opinion  The Power of Presidential Approval  What Is Public Opinion?  Expressed through voting  The.
PUBLIC OPINION, PARTICIPATION, AND VOTING CHAPTER 8.
Forms of Political Participation Lobbying is the strategy by which organized interests seek to influence the passage of legislation by exerting direct.
UNIT 4: THE ELECTORAL PROCESS Study Guide Review.
Measuring Public Opinion and Political Information How Polls Are Conducted –Sample: a small proportion of people who are chosen in a survey to be representative.
UNIT 4: THE ELECTORAL PROCESS Study Guide Review.
Thursday, March 23, 2017 Objective: Students will be able to understand how public opinion is measured and what polls tell us about the views of American.
Political Socialization
Public Opinion Belief & Behaviors.
Chapter 6 Public Opinion
(10.5) Public Opinion and Polling
Public Opinion Chapter 8.1 and 8.2.
Presentation transcript:

Voting and Opinion Forming 11/7/2011

Clearly Communicated Learning Objectives in Written Form Upon completion of this course, students will be able to: – discuss and critically analyze political events in the United States government – identify and explain the role of formal and informal institutions and their effect on policy. – assess the 2010 and 2012 elections without resorting to partisan bickering.

Office Hours and Readings Chapter 5 Chapter 4 ( ) Office Hours – Tuesday 8-10:30 – Wednesday 8-9

"The most accurate form of public opinion polling is the vote." Walter Dean Burnham

What is Political Opinion those opinions held by private persons which governments find it prudent to heed -- V.O. Key Why do politicians Follow it?

POLITICAL SOCIALIZATION How We Learn about Politics

Political Socialization The process of learning about political issues and forming opinions How we learn about politics Same as religion, culture and language.

We Learn the Apollo American Creed Freedom Equality Support for the System

We Are Proud to Be Americans

The Family We spend tons of time with them The more time, the more influence

Why Family is Important Socio-economic status Primacy Principle Structuring Principle It Ebbs as we get older

What We Take out of it: Party ID We often get our parents partisanship Values

What about Schools Teach the status quo Correlate with our parents Ritualizes Nationalism

The First Things We Learn Little kids confuse political and religious authority The Flag is Good

Early Childhood The President Police Neither can do wrong

Later On We learn more concepts Government as civics lesson We get more cynical

Off To College The Percentage of people going to college continues to rise College often correlates with parents SES

The College Effect

The role of your professors

The Role of Peers Often Reinforce our Parents views We do not tend to discuss politics Our friends often share our SES and values

Work Peers We work with people like us They share our SES Our views are unlikely to change

The Mass Media and Political Socialization We Receive a lot of information Not all of it sticks Those who could learn the most, watch the least

We Are Pretty Clueless

So What often shapes our views Projection Adoption Partisanship

DETERMINING POLITICAL OPINION

America is Obsessed with Polling Why Polls – Raise issues – Gauge support – Get specific opinions Everyone Uses them – Candidates – Media – Elected officials

The GOP

What is Sampling? selecting a representative part of a population To determine parameters of the whole population.

The Concept of Sampling Blood Tests Food Tests

The Practicality of Sampling Time Money Size

How Can a Survey of 1000 People Represent 200 Million? Responses Cancel each other out No New opinions are added

KINDS OF SAMPLES

Convenience Samples Super-Fast Pick easy targets Find the first 100 people

Judgment Samples Find People who Match your criteria Find the first 1000 college kids

Self Selected Samples People Choose to Be in the Sample Certain people have much more incentive to participate Call-in, internet, text

TELEPHONE SURVEYS The Best Way to do it

Why Phones? Fast Cheap Representative

Why Not Phones Low Response Rate Not everyone has a phone

PROBLEMS OF SAMPLING

No Sample is Perfect All samples have error Large Samples= Less Error

All Voters< Registered Voters< Likely Voters

Poorly Designed Samples 10 million ballots distributed 2.2 Million Responses Alf Landon Will defeat FDR (by a landslide)

Stopping too Soon It was a close election They stopped polling They picked the wrong people

Question Bias Leading Questions Double Barreled Questions

A Bad Question If you had to make up the SEU Budget, and could only keep one of the following activities which of the items would you keep? a. Faculty Lunch Colloquium b. Expanded Library Hours c. Reduced Parking Rates for International Students d. Discounted tickets for Topper Club members

Liars Socially Acceptable Questions Always Remember Homer Simpson's Code of the SchoolyardSchoolyard – Don't tattle – Always make fun of those different from you. – Never say anything, unless you're sure everyone feels exactly the same way you do.

Always Check Who sponsored the poll How they got the sample How big was the sample

IS GOVERNMENT RESPONSIVE TO PUBLIC OPINION

Do they Listen? Government responds to opinion 2/3 of the time Sometimes they do not listen to public opinion

Why Not? General vs. Intense opinion Voting vs general public Opinion is only one form of participation

Opinions can change quickly

We Give answers to anything