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Wang, Haiyan; van Prooijen, Jan-Willem – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2023
Conspiracy beliefs have been studied mostly through cross-sectional designs. We conducted a five-wave longitudinal study (N = 376; two waves before and three waves after the 2020 American presidential elections) to examine if the election results influenced specific conspiracy beliefs and conspiracy mentality, and whether effects differ between…
Descriptors: Misconceptions, Beliefs, Theories, Elections
Mine Kar; Neriman Saygili – Turkish Online Journal of Educational Technology - TOJET, 2024
In this study, since no candidate received more than fifty percent of the votes in the TRNC Presidential election held on October 11, 2020, the election campaign visions of the candidates who made it to the second round and their latest commercials were analyzed using discourse analysis. For this purpose, the political advertising campaign…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Political Campaigns, Advertising, Television Commercials
Napasporn Chaiwong – rEFLections, 2025
This study aims to investigate the use of criticism strategies by Thai politicians, the Move Forward Party (MFP) and the Phalang Pracharat Party (PPRP), in their campaign speeches. It also aims to find out whether these strategies are used differently by the two parties and how these differences reflect their political agendas. A qualitative and…
Descriptors: Elections, Speeches, Criticism, Political Campaigns
Michael A. Goodman – Journal of College Student Development, 2024
While biographical sketches of many publicly elected leaders in the US exist, little is known about the connection between serving in college student government and running for or serving in elected public office after college. This phenomenological study explored the experiences of 19 former college student government officers in elected,…
Descriptors: Student Government, College Students, Political Candidates, Public Officials
Thomas Waldvogel – International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism, 2024
What do pupils learn from bilingual interventions of civic education? This paper addresses this question by analyzing survey responses of 301 pupils who participated in a bilingual role-play about a televised debate on the 2022 French presidential election in French foreign language classes. The study shows, first, that the intervention…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Civics, Student Attitudes, Bilingual Education
Merrill, Brett M.; Vogeler, Heidi; Kirchhoefer, Jessica; Tass, Shannon; Erekson, Davey; Beecher, Mark; Worthen, Vaughn; Hobbs, Klint; Boardman, R. D.; Bingham, Jennie; Bailey, Russell J.; Cox, Jonathan C.; Carney, Dever M.; Kilcullen, J. Ryan; Griner, Derek – Journal of College Student Psychotherapy, 2023
Research, media sources, and polls have identified negative effects associated with presidential elections. The aim of this research was to investigate associations between US presidential election results and mental health outcomes in university students. This investigation consisted of two independent studies. Study 1 analyzed data collected…
Descriptors: Presidents, Elections, Political Campaigns, College Students
Martin, Beth; Redmond, Melissa; Woodside, Liz – Journal of Political Science Education, 2023
The benefits of experiential learning are well-documented, but large course enrollment can be seen as a barrier to providing meaningful experiential learning experiences. Political science literature on experiential learning in large undergraduate classes has prioritized simulations of political processes over direct student engagement in actual…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Large Group Instruction, Class Size, Experiential Learning
Phi Delta Kappan, 2024
Preparing students to enter the workforce and attracting and retaining good teachers are Americans' top educational priorities for the next administration in Washington, regardless of who wins the upcoming presidential election, the 2024 PDK Poll finds. While eight in 10 or more Americans pick those two items as priorities, other policy priorities…
Descriptors: Public Opinion, Public Support, Public Education, Educational Objectives
Bicak, Ibrahim; Taylor, Z. W. – Higher Education Politics & Economics, 2023
For the first time in U.S. higher education history, new international student enrollment at four-year U.S. institutions declined for the second consecutive academic year in 2017-2018. Many studies have investigated why international students choose to pursue U.S. higher education. However, scant research has explored how U.S. politics affects the…
Descriptors: Foreign Students, Enrollment Trends, Political Attitudes, Political Influences
Eli Ben-Michael; Avi Feller; Erin Hartman – Grantee Submission, 2023
In the November 2016 U.S. presidential election, many state level public opinion polls, particularly in the Upper Midwest, incorrectly predicted the winning candidate. One leading explanation for this polling miss is that the precipitous decline in traditional polling response rates led to greater reliance on statistical methods to adjust for the…
Descriptors: Public Opinion, National Surveys, Elections, Political Campaigns
Nicholas F. Russo – ProQuest LLC, 2022
On November 8, 2016, businessman and mogul Donald J. Trump won the U.S. presidential election, sending shockwaves across the country given that polls indicated that Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton would win the election. On U.S. college campuses, students reacted to the election win, and for LGBTQ+ undergraduate students, their…
Descriptors: Presidents, LGBTQ People, Undergraduate Students, Minority Group Students
Dodd, Andrew; English, Peter; Lidberg, Johan; Newlands, Maxine – Journal of University Teaching and Learning Practice, 2021
e was the largest student journalism project ever undertaken in Australia. Approximately 1000 students from 28 universities worked to cover the 2016 federal election. The project aimed to provide effective training on political reporting in a work-integrated learning environment. Utilising a combination of analysis and descriptions of the project…
Descriptors: Journalism Education, Foreign Countries, Elections, Political Campaigns
Paul G. Fitchett; Brett L. M. Levy; Jeremy D. Stoddard – AERA Open, 2024
This study explores social studies teachers' self-reported instruction about teaching the 2020 election in U.S. secondary schools. We analyzed survey responses from 1,723 secondary social studies teachers from 12 states (3 left-leaning, 3 right-leaning, 6 battleground) collected in the weeks after the election, examining self-reported pedagogies,…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Elections, Political Campaigns, Social Studies
Keegan, Patrick; Vaughan, Kelly P. – Democracy & Education, 2023
This instrumental case study of Generation Z preservice teachers enrolled in elementary teaching methods courses in social studies and literacy explores the impact of polarization on their political engagement and teaching. Using the 2020 presidential election as a teachable moment, participants developed and taught literacy-infused civics units…
Descriptors: Age Groups, Preservice Teachers, Elementary School Teachers, Methods Courses
Fernandez, Frank; Ro, Hyun Kyoung; Bergom, Inger; Niemczyk, Molly – Journal of Diversity in Higher Education, 2020
Latinx millennials are the least likely group to vote in U.S. presidential elections. However, college-educated Latinx millennials defy the trend. Does a diverse campus environment help explain Latinx students' voter turnout? In this article, we draw upon Hurtado, Alvarez, Guillermo-Wann, Cuellar, and Arellano's (2012) model of diverse learning…
Descriptors: Diversity (Institutional), Hispanic American Students, Voting, Elections