Chapter 11 - Public Opinion (Measuring Americans' Opinions)
Sample
A group of individuals from a larger population used to measure public opinion
Random Selection
A method of choosing all poll respondents in a way that does not over-or underrepresent any group of the population - Ex.) Senior class is 2,000: You don't need to have all 2,000 in the poll - CHOOSE RANDOMLY
Entrance Survey
A poll conducted of people coming to an event
~ Push Polling
A polling technique in which the questions are designed to shape the respondent's opinion - Ex.) 2000 South Carolina Republican Primary: "Would you be more or less likely to vote for John McCain... if you knew he had fathered an illegitimate black child?"
Weighting
A procedure in which the survey is adjusted according to the demographics of the larger population
Scientific Poll
A representative poll of randomly selected respondents with a statistically significant sample size, using neutral language
Representative Sample
A sample that reflects the demographics of the larger population
Focus Group
A small group of individuals assembled for a conversation about specific issues
Exit Poll
A survey conducted outside of a polling place in which individuals are asked who or what they just voted for and why - Demographics
Mass Survey
A survey designed to measure the opinions of the population, usually consisting of 1,500 responses
Tracking Poll
A survey determining the level of support for a candidate or an issue throughout a campaign
Benchmark Poll
A survey taken at the beginning of a political campaign in order to gauge support for a candidate and determine which issues are important to voters
~ Public Opinion Poll
Interviews or surveys with samples of citizens that are used to estimate the feelings and beliefs of the entire population - Issues: Biased Questions, Sampling Error, Bandwagon Effect, Underdog Effect - ALL polls are biased; still, they can be useful
~ Stratified/Weighted Sample
Making sure demographic groups are properly represented in a sample
~ Question Bias
The ability of a question's wording or format to influence respondents' answers
Sampling Error
The margin of error in a poll, which usually is calculated to plus or minus three percentage points
Question Wording
The phrasing of a question in a public opinion poll
Question Order
The sequencing of questions in public opinion polls
~ Margin Of Error
The smaller the margin, the better. A margin of error of plus or minus 4 is considered acceptable
Public Opinion
The sum of individual attitudes or beliefs about an issue or question in government, policies, and issues. - Measured by interviews and surveys: Polls
Random Digit Dialing
The use for telephone numbers randomly generated by computer to select potential survey respondents
~ Straw Polls
Unscientific surveys used to gauge public opinion on a variety of issues and policies - Ex.) Iowa State Fair - Corn Kernels