GENERAL INFO
SOURCES OF
FEATURES OF
MEASURING (Pt I)
MEASURING (Pt II)
100

What is Public opinion?

Refers to the ideas or attitudes that most people hold about a particular issue or person.

100

What are the factors that influence public opinion?

A person's background, the mass media, public officials, and interest groups.

100

What three words often describe public opinion?

Direction, intensity, and stability.

100

What is one way to measure public opinion?

To look at election results.

100

What are push polls?

Polls in which the questions are worded so as to influence a persons responses one way or another.

200

What are the two things the President need?

The support of the public and the support of Congress

200

What plays important roles in people's opinions?

Age, gender, income, race, religion, occupation, and place of residence.

200

What is one important question about the public opinion on a given topic?

Whether the public opinion is negative or positive

200

What is a more accurate way to measure public opinion?

To have individuals to fill out a survey or a public opinion poll.

200

How do polls help Government officials?

So they do not have to wait until the next election to see if people approve or disapprove of government policies.

300

Why does the President need to understand public opinion?

To make effective and timely decisions

300

What are considered mass media?

Television, radio, newspaper, magazines, recordings, movies, Internet websites, and books?

300

What does intensity refer to?

It refers to the strength of an opinion on a given issue.

300

What do pollsters do?

They measure the president's popularity or public attitudes toward possible White House proposals.

300

Why does the media constantly conduct polls during elections?

So they can report who is ahead.

400

Why is public opinion not always the same among people?

People have different views and not everyone agrees on the same problems.

400

What are interest groups?

Interest groups work at influencing public opinion by trying to persuade people, including public officials toward their point of view.

400

What does the stability of public opinion mean?

How firmly people hold to their views.

400

What are random samples?

Pollsters usually question a random group of 1,500 people to reflect the characteristics of a whole population.

400

Who also shapes public policy?

Interest groups, political parties, the mass media, other institutions of government, and individuals.

500

How does high public popularity help a President with Congress?

It makes it more likely Congress will support the Presidents programs.

500

Why are interest groups sometimes called pressure groups?

They attempt to put pressure on the government  to act in their interest.

500

What issues do most Americans hold the strongest convictions on?

The issues that directly affect their lives.

500

How can pollsters manipulate the process to nearly get any answer they want?

By changing the wording of the questions.

500

What do the critics think these polls treat elections like?

A horse race