The Polling Process AP Government.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
What is Public Opinion? Public opinion can be described as those attitudes held by a significant number of people on matters of government and politics.
Advertisements

Chapter 8: Mass Media and Public Opinion Section 2
Magruder’s American Government
The Formation of Public Opinion
George H.W. Bush & William Jefferson Clinton
United States Politics 1 Public Opinion and Polling.
PUBLIC OPINION AND POLITICAL SOCIALIZATION How the American republic works depends largely on who participates and how.
Public Opinion Magruder Chapter Eight. The Formation of Public Opinion.
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.
How We Form Political Opinions Political Opinions Personal Beliefs Political Knowledge Cues From Leaders.
Public Opinion Wilson Chapter 7. Pair and Share: Connect with someone sitting near you and talk about the public opinion polls you researched. Things.
The Mass Media and the Political Agenda. Introduction Mass Media: Mass Media: Television, radio, newspapers, magazines, the Internet and other means of.
Monday 9/22 RAP Today: Watch media and campaigns. HW: Begin to Read Elections and interest groups; Ch. 9.
Chapter 8: Mass Media and Public Opinion Section 1
Announcements… The end of the quarter is this Friday ▫Check your grades online ▫Turn in any missing assignments Quiz Friday--Voting ▫Expect a study guide.
Mass Media.
Public Opinion Political Science I. Copyright © Texas Education Agency All rights reserved. Images and other multimedia content used with permission.
PUBLIC OPINION AND POLITICAL SOCIALIZATION Chapter 11 O’Connor and Sabato American Government: Continuity and Change.
Chapter 8 section 2 “Measuring Public Opinion”
U NIT 2 - P UBLIC O PINION & M ASS M EDIA IN D EMOCRACY.
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 AND POLITICAL SOCIALIZATION
Public Opinion, Mass Media, and Interest Groups Chapter 11 Section 1, 2, and 3.
1 Public Opinion: Be Careful. 2 3 The Formation of Public Opinion What is public opinion and why is it so difficult to define? How do family and education.
Chapter 8 Mass Media and Public Opinion. Section 1 The Formation of Public Opinion.
Chapter 8.  The attitudes held by a significant number of people on matters of government and politics.
Public Opinion & Polling Discussions & Activity Chapter 11.1.
123 Go To Section: U.S. Govt. & Citizenship Week 3 Bell #3 11/15/12 If you took all of the televisions in America and added up the time that they were.
CHAPTER 8 The Formation of Public Opinion What is public opinion and why is it so difficult to define? How do family and education shape public opinion?
Objectives Describe the challenges involved in measuring public opinion. Explain why scientific opinion polls are the best way to measure public opinion.
Chapter 8 Politics and the Media Objectives: The student will: 1. Examine the term public opinion and understand why it is difficult to define 2. Analyze.
Chapter 8. Definition: those attitudes held can be described this way; those attitudes held by a significant number of people on matters of government.
Part III – Gathering Data
Public Opinion Those attitudes held by a significant of people on matters of government and politics. –However this term as actually difficult to define.
 Elections: The voice of the people. › Frequently interpreted as voters acceptance or rejection of a party platform. › Affected by many factors and give.
The Measurement of Public Opinion Section 2 Pgs
Measuring Public Opinion Measuring Public Opinion – the general shape of public opinion on an issue can be found through a variety of means. Elections.
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.
P ART 1 T HE F ORMATION AND M EASUREMENT OF P UBLIC O PINION What is public opinion and why is it so difficult to define? What are the factors that shape.
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.
Unit F: Mass Media Chapter 8 / Section 2 Measuring Public Opinion.
Presentation Pro © 2001 by Prentice Hall, Inc. C H A P T E R 8 Mass Media and Public Opinion.
Polls. Today: The mathematical and scientific logic of polling Problems with polls.
Intro: 11/28/06  Interpreting Diagrams – “The Political Spectrum” page 209  Interpreting graphs page 212.
BELLWORK What is public opinion? (Page 514). REMINDER (Periods 3, 4, 6 & 7) Chapter 18 Assessment: 1-20 Pages Due Thursday, April 16th.
PB #5 Polling. Measuring PO Public Opinion – people’s opinion on an issue PO Poll: small number of people – the sample (respondents) – are interviewed.
Public Opinion and the Mass Media. Lesson 1: What is Public Opinion?
Chapter 8 Mass Media and Public Opinion Section 2 Measuring Public Opinion.
Chapter 11 Public Opinion and Political Socialization.
Public Opinion Polling AP Government and Politics
Presentation Pro © 2001 by Prentice Hall, Inc. Magruder’s American Government C H A P T E R 8 Mass Media and Public Opinion.
Chapter 8: Mass Media and Public Opinion Section 1.
UNIT 4: THE ELECTORAL PROCESS Study Guide Review.
UNIT 4: THE ELECTORAL PROCESS Study Guide Review.
C H A P T E R 8 Mass Media and Public Opinion By: Mr. Thomas Parsons.
Mass Media And Public Opinion
Chapter 8: Mass Media and Public Opinion Section 2
Magruder’s American Government
Magruder’s American Government
Mass Media and Public Opinion
Mass Media and Public Opinion
Mass Media and Public Opinion
Chapter 8: Mass Media and Public Opinion Section 2
(10.5) Public Opinion and Polling
Mass Media and Public Opinion
Public Opinion and Polling
Unit 2 Public Opinion.
Chapter 8: Mass Media and Public Opinion Section 2
Chapter 8: Mass Media and Public Opinion Section 2
Presentation transcript:

The Polling Process AP Government

The Polling Process Scientific polling is extremely difficult 5 basic steps 1. define your target audience 12th grade girls steel workers all registered voters in VA 2. construct a sample you can’t poll all registered voters in VA, so you must figure out how to get a proportional sample that will get you accurate data Will never have a perfect sample; margin is usually +_ 3

The Polling Process 5 basic steps cont… 3. prepare valid questions Yes or No? The best questions measure INTENSITY, STABILITY, & RELEVANCE To what extent? (strongly agree, agree, don’t know, disagree, etc.) Try not to propose “loaded,” emotionally charged, or biased words Keep vocabulary simple, and questions short 4. select and control how the poll will be taken Surveys (phone or mail) Focus group Pollster’s dress, tone, and attitude could affect answers Often, people lie or bend the truth… don’t want to sound uninformed (depends on wording)

The Polling Process 5 basic steps cont… 5. analyze and report findings to the government For data to be of any value, it must be properly analyzed and broken down into data that can be easily interpreted Pollsters use technology to draw conclusions based on their findings

Polling More politicians, including the president, rely on polling data today than ever before Reagan and Clinton used public opinion more than any had before them

Polling Polling Data & Presidential Decision-Making Examples Reagan did not intervene in Nicaragua when he faced a challenge from leftist insurgents because it did not poll well among American citizens (criticized by the media for relying on public opinion for foreign policy). Public opinion polls convinced George H. W. Bush (who feared another Vietnam) to drive Iraqi troops out of Kuwait.

Polling Polling Data & Presidential Decision-Making Examples Congress did not impeach President Clinton after public opinion polls showed that 71 percent of people were outraged at how the media was handling the Monica Lewinsky scandal. George W. Bush wanted to privatize social security to those who wanted it in (aka young people could start their own private account for their social security contributions that the government could not touch), but when 46 percent of people in a poll disagreed with this, he did not do it.

Polling These cases should not be viewed as a celebration of the power of public opinion or the importance of polls. Rather, they illustrate the extent to which public views have played a central role in the course of national affairs since the 1980s. What do you think? Is public opinion meaningful?

Polling Project