Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

What do adolescents think about political ideologies? - The investigation of socialization effects Nóra Miklós, Dóra Hamrák, Balázs Fehér, Ágnes Szabó.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "What do adolescents think about political ideologies? - The investigation of socialization effects Nóra Miklós, Dóra Hamrák, Balázs Fehér, Ágnes Szabó."— Presentation transcript:

1 What do adolescents think about political ideologies? - The investigation of socialization effects Nóra Miklós, Dóra Hamrák, Balázs Fehér, Ágnes Szabó

2 Research of the Political Ideology Lab  Interdisciplinary approach of ideologies in Central and Eastern Europe  Methodological and thematical variety: from as many angles as possible (Psychology, Sociology and Political Science)

3 Adolescents and Politics  Why them?  adolescents’ concept of ideologies – how stable are they and what kind of factors contribute in changing them? Gustaffson (1987): parents, peers, school-mates, teachers, mass media and other different communities are all socializational mediators institutional effectspeer influence

4 1. Institutional influences (schools) Palonsky (1987) and Newcomb (1943) Alwin (1991), Banks and Roker (1994), Kallio and Häkli (2011) Banks and Roker (1994)  significant differences between the students of different types of schools Theoretical introduction

5 2. Peer influences high focus on parental influence + the neglect of role of peers BUT peer influence does exist! (e.g. Kuhn 2004; Cicognani et al. 2012, Duriez et al. 2013) social identity theorydomain relevance (Hartup 2005)Campbell’s four principles (1980)

6 Sample 228 adolescents (17-18-year-old) 3 types of high schools from Budapest

7 Method Timing: Spring, 2011 Questionnaire: Representation Five Words Associations Political orientation Left-Right bipolar scale + open- ended question Peer effects Sociometry

8 Social Representations Theory (Moscovici, 1984, Abric, 1994) Five Words Association Method Content analysis (Züll, Scholz & Schmitt, 2010) 9 main categories

9 IDEOLOGIESSOCIETAL VALUESSYMBOLIC CONTENTSTIME AND SPACESOCIAL GROUPSCURRENT POLITICAL ACTORSDIRECT REFERENCES TO POLITICAL ACTIVITYAFFECTIVE CONTENTSNOT CLASSIFIABLE ANSWERS

10 Results – General findings 1604 classifiable associations – 816 related to the Right – 753 related to the Left Most frequent: – Forms and methods of political activity (22,3%) – Political actors (14,5%) – Affective contents (10,75%)

11 Substantial differences between Left and Right Results – General findings II. BUT they are not absolute counterpoints!

12 Results – The structure of the representation

13 Conclusions #1 – The structure Symbolic, limited core Diverse, extended peripheral ring BUT Adolescents DO have social representation about political ideologies!

14 negative and affective contents along with actual political events + non-classifiable answers more abstract concepts + ideological contents Results – Differences between schools vocational schools high schools

15 Conclusions #2 – School types Vocational schools – unstable, diverse representation at both wings Right-wing: more remarkable differences  elite (+ordinary high schools): more stable + greater consensus Similarity between the 2 high schools: Jaccard-index  R: J=21% (N=70)  L: J=21% (N=56) Sharp cleavage between vocational and high schools!

16 Discussion Different socializational atmospheres  teachers  peers  socio-economic status of the family  attitude and vision of the school The representation of the Left- and Right-wing starts to develop in different ways!

17 A fruitful prospective direction: Network-analysis of the classes

18 The vocational school Density:.703 (168 connections); N=16

19 The common high school Density:.563 (453 connections); N=29

20 The elite high school Density:.570 (564 connections); N=32

21 Are friends similar in political orientation? Left-Right semantic differential scale with open- ended question People often speak about Left-Wing and Right-Wing in politics. Where do you place yourself on this scale? Left-wing1234567Right-wing Please, explain your choice in a few words!

22 Some interesting cliques „not interested”; „neutral” Vocational school class N=21 „FIDESZ”; „Right-wing”; „belonged to the Right”; „need for order”

23 Some interesting cliques „FIDESZ”; „Christianity”; „Viktor Orbán”; „sympathy” Common high school class N=71 „do not talk about it”; „lack of interest”; „no answer”

24 Some interesting cliques „neutral”; „no answer”; „change, against conservatism and Right-wing” Elite high school class N=105 „liberalism, Left is better, because of parents”; „neutral”; „do not know, hate politics”

25 Limitations and future plans Expansion of the sample The problem of the frequency and rank More complex network analysis Involving parents Focus groups

26 pil@ppk.elte.hu Thank you for your attention!

27 T HE REPRESENTATION OF E LITE H IGH S CHOOL STUDENTS ABOUT THE R IGHT High FrequencyLow Rank Political actors (25%. 2.1) References to political activity (38%. 2.9) Ideological contents (5%. 2.7) Societal groups (3%. 2.8) High Rank Societal values (9%. 3.2) Symbolic contents (6%. 3) Time and Space (2%. 3) Affective contents (10%. 3.4)

28 T HE REPRESENTATION OF COMMON HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS ABOUT THE RIGHT High FrequencyLow Rank Political actors (25%. 2.3) Ideological contents (4%. 2) Societal values (11%. 2.8) Time and Space (11%. 2.8) Affective contents (11%. 2.9) High Rank References to political activity (36%. 3) Symbolic contents (9%. 3.2) Societal groups (3%. 3.4)

29 THE REPRESENTATION OF VOCATIONAL SCHOOL STUDENTS ABOUT THE RIGHT High FrequencyLow Rank Low rank Ideological contents (5%. 2.7) Symbolic contents (14%. 2.9) Time and Space (3%. 2.5) Societal groups (4%. 2.8) Political actors (18%. 2.8) Affective contents (17%. 2.8) High rankReferences to political activity (31%. 3.1) Societal values (11%. 3.2)

30 T HE REPRESENTATION OF E LITE H IGH S CHOOL STUDENTS ABOUT THE L EFT High FrequencyLow Rank Ideological contents (16%. 2.3) Symbolic contents (9%. 2.7) Time and Space (13%. 2.7) Political actors (19%. 2.1) High Rank References to political activity (30%. 3) Societal values(5%. 3.7) Societal groups (17%. 3.3) Affective contents (15%. 3)

31 T HE REPRESENTATION OF COMMON HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS ABOUT THE L EFT High FrequencyLow Rank Ideological contents (25%. 2.1) Political actors (20%. 2.4) Societal values (2%. 2.4) Affective contents (15%. 2.9) High Rank Political actors (36%. 3) References to political activity (29%. 3.1) Societal groups (5%. 3) Time and Space (7%. 3.1)

32 HE REPRESENTATION OF VOCATIONAL SCHOOL STUDENTS ABOUT THE L EFT High FrequencyLow Rank Affective contents (29%. 2.8) Ideological contents (6%. 2.9) Time and Space (3%. 2.5) Political actors (18%. 2.4) High Rank References to political activity (26%. 3.1) Societal values (3%. 3.7) Symbolic contents (12%. 3.3) Societal groups (2%. 3.8)


Download ppt "What do adolescents think about political ideologies? - The investigation of socialization effects Nóra Miklós, Dóra Hamrák, Balázs Fehér, Ágnes Szabó."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google