Chapter 6
Public Opinion
Chapter 7
Voting and Elections
Chapter 8
Media and Public Opinion
Chapter 9
Political Parties
100

What is the definition of public opinion?

The collective attitudes and beliefs of individuals on one or more issues.

100

What is the difference between the voting-age population and voting-eligible population?

Voting-age population includes everyone over 18; voting-eligible excludes non-citizens and ineligible felons.

100

What is the mass media, and how does it influence public opinion?

Media sources like TV, internet, newspapers that influence what people think about.

100

What is a political party?

An organized group that seeks to gain power through elections and influence policy.

200

What is political socialization?

The process by which individuals acquire political beliefs and values.

200

What is the definition of a registered voter?

A person who has officially enrolled to vote in elections.

200

What is agenda setting in the media?

The media's ability to influence what topics people consider important.

200

What are the main functions of political parties?

Recruit candidates, organize elections, present policy alternatives, mobilize voters, govern.

300

Name three agents of political socialization and identify which is typically the strongest.

Family (strongest), schools, media.

300

List two factors that increase voter turnout and two factors that decrease it.

Increase: education level, strong political interest; Decrease: voter ID laws, apathy, registration difficulty.

300

What is the difference between priming and framing?

Priming: media influences the criteria people use to judge issues

Framing: media shapes how an issue is presented or understood

300

What is the difference between a party platform and party ideology?

Platform: specific policy positions

 Ideology: broad belief system

400

What are the key components of a public opinion poll?

Sample, random sampling, sample size, margin of error, question wording.

400

What is the difference between a primary and a caucus?

A primary is a statewide voting process; a caucus is a local meeting where party members discuss and vote.

400

Describe a positive and a negative aspect of increased media exposure in modern society.

Positive: more political awareness 

Negative: misinformation, polarization, echo chambers

400

Define party organization, party in government, and party in the electorate.

Organization: formal party structure

In government: elected officials 

In electorate: voters who identify with a party

500

What are two problems or limitations with public opinion surveys?

Biased wording, leading questions, small or unrepresentative samples, push polls.

500

What is the difference between a closed and open primary? Also define retrospective vs prospective voting.

Closed: only party members vote 

Open: any registered voter can choose

Retrospective: vote based on past performance

Prospective: based on future promises

500

How do media techniques like agenda setting, priming, and framing shape public perceptions of politics and policies?

They determine what people think about (agenda), how they evaluate issues (priming), and how they understand them (framing).

500

Explain how party organization, party in government, and party in the electorate interact to influence elections and policy-making.

Organization recruits and funds candidates, elected officials pass policies, electorate supports party through votes and activism.

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