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Showing 1 to 15 of 144 results Save | Export
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Sarah Staveteig Ford; Matthew Kirwin – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2023
International survey researchers are increasingly turning to a geospatial sampling approach known as gridded population sampling for finer resolution and a more updated sampling frame than conventional census-based sampling. To date, there have been no direct comparisons of accuracy between survey results derived from the two methods. This…
Descriptors: Accuracy, Sampling, Elections, Census Figures
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Anita Manion – Higher Education Policy, 2024
This study seeks to assess whether self-interest influences support for two policies to cancel student debt--one forgiving all student debt and one taking a means-tested approach to debt forgiveness. Each of these policy proposals offers a material benefit to certain groups of individuals while imposing cost or having no benefit to others, which…
Descriptors: Debt (Financial), Loan Repayment, Taxes, Predictor Variables
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
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
Gelman, Andrew; Hullman, Jessica; Wlezien, Christopher; Morris, George Elliott – Grantee Submission, 2020
Presidential elections can be forecast using information from political and economic conditions, polls, and a statistical model of changes in public opinion over time. However, these "knowns" about how to make a good presidential election forecast come with many unknowns due to the challenges of evaluating forecast calibration and…
Descriptors: Presidents, Elections, Incentives, Public Opinion
Levitsky, Steven; Ziblatt, Daniel – American Educator, 2020
Nearly all living Americans grew up taking democracy for granted. Until recently, many believed--and acted as if--the constitutional system was unbreakable, no matter how recklessly politicians behaved. No longer. Americans watch with growing unease as the political system threatens to go off the rails: costly government shutdowns, stolen Supreme…
Descriptors: Democracy, Public Opinion, Political Attitudes, Social Change
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Annika Hecht; Sandra Obradovic; Eleni Andreouli – British Educational Research Journal, 2025
Citizenship Education (CE) has been found to be an effective tool in preparing young people to participate actively in a democracy. However, recent years have seen a decline in both the quality and provision of CE, coupled with a notable absence of public input on the subject. This paper provides an initial exploration of the British public's…
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, Ideology, Gender Differences, Institutional Role
Hess, Frederick M.; Hamilton, Kelsey – American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research, 2016
Going back a quarter century to 1992, our last three presidents all made education an integral issue of their campaigns. However, education has been largely absent during the 2016 presidential contest. Why is education not drawing much attention? For most people, education is not as urgent as national security and the economy. Much of education's…
Descriptors: Public Opinion, Educational Attitudes, Elections, Surveys
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Freas, Adam; Limon-Guzman, Jesus – Berkeley Review of Education, 2017
Before the start of this past fall semester, a large Northern California community college, celebrated its 100th anniversary. One of the lead programs featured a panel of current faculty, staff, and students, in addition to a former Japanese American student who attended the college during World War II. Her story offered an opportunity for to…
Descriptors: Elections, Reflection, Community Colleges, Public Opinion
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DeBray, Elizabeth; Hanley, Johanna; Scott, Janelle; Lubienski, Christopher – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2020
National philanthropies have recently played a prominent role in spending on U.S. urban school board elections, largely seeking to promote candidates who support charter schools. In Atlanta in 2017, 30 candidates competed for nine open school board seats. One practice has been to fund intermediary organisations (IOs) (e.g. advocacy groups,…
Descriptors: Private Financial Support, Philanthropic Foundations, Boards of Education, Elections
Catone, Keith C. – Voices in Urban Education, 2017
Following the election of Donald Trump, the author, his wife, and colleagues from the Annenberg Institute for Social Reform (AISR) experienced different forms of apprehension: "anxious" apprehension, which can also be a moment of activist birth that sets the stage for a new level of consciousness to be awakened; "critical"…
Descriptors: Activism, Public Opinion, Educational Attitudes, Elections
Phi Delta Kappan, 2020
The 2020 PDK Poll of the Public's Attitude Toward the Public Schools finds that more than half of adults consider public education highly important in their choice for president. And regardless of political party, most Americans agree that the administration in Washington should focus on attracting and retaining good teachers to the profession and…
Descriptors: Public Schools, Public Opinion, Educational Attitudes, Public Education
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Sullivan, Matthew C. – Communications in Information Literacy, 2019
This article surveys the library and information science (LIS) response to the problems of fake news and misinformation from the 2016 U.S. presidential election to the end of 2018, focusing on how librarians and other information professionals in the United States have articulated the problems and the paths forward for combating them.…
Descriptors: News Reporting, Credibility, Information Literacy, Elections
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Lo, Jane C. – Social Studies, 2018
This article reports on a study that asks how might an elections simulation influence students with strong polarizing political beliefs? The elections simulation asks students to take on roles as candidate teams, political party leaders, interest groups, and media outlets in a mock presidential election. Students not only learn about elections but…
Descriptors: High School Students, Advanced Placement Programs, United States Government (Course), Civics
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Casalaspi, David – AERA Online Paper Repository, 2017
Recent decades have witnessed a proliferation of nationally organized school reform interest groups like StudentsFirst. While historically active at the state and federal levels, these organizations are increasingly involving themselves in local school board elections by recruiting candidates, making donations, and offering policy advice. However,…
Descriptors: Voting, Elections, Local Issues, Politics of Education
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