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Published byGyles Parker Modified over 9 years ago
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Chapter 4 Section 1
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Public Opinion – the collection of individual opinions toward issues or objects of general interests, that is, those that concern a significant number of people
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Political Socialization – learning about politics by exposure to new information supplied or filtered through parents, peers, schools, the media, political leaders, and the community.
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The Family: Parents share their opinions and children imitate them; Children reflect what they learn in the home; Children inherit their social and economic positions from their parents; Agreement with parents declines when young adults leave the home
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School: Schools promote patriotic rituals; Textbooks foster commitment to government and the status quo; Reading habits and language skills help build democratic citizenship; College broadens students’ perspectives and leads to greater understanding of the world
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Peers: Have the most influence when the peer group is attractive to the individual and when the individual spends time with the group.
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Adult Socialization: Political opinions are affected by such factors as marriage, divorce, unemployment, new jobs, or moves to new locations.
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Early polling efforts: Straw polls – unscientific polls run by newspapers or other media sources that attempt to forecast election outcomes
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Emergence of Scientific Polling: Beginning after WWII and based on marketing research; Applies mathematical principles of probability; Gallup among the first to use the technique
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Polls and Politics: Polling catches on with politicians in the 1960s; Presidents often follow polls on a weekly basis and shape their messages based on these polls; “Crafted talk” is allows politicians to move away from the center and cater to the more extremist views of their base while appearing to be mainstream; Push polls – polls that try to determine if certain information can “push” voters in a particular direction
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Many Americans do not know much about government beyond the Constitution; Most Americans do not keep up with what goes on in Washington, DC; Lack of knowledge prevents Americans from holding government accountable; Failure to stay informed means politicians can ignore what the public wants
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