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Political Beliefs and Behaviors Videos 16 videos
AP U.S. Government 2.1 Political Beliefs and Behaviors. All of the following groups are part of the liberal coalition except which?
AP U.S. Government: Political Beliefs and Behaviors Drill 1, Problem 2. An internet pop-up that asks you if you prefer Wendy's or McDonald's is a w...
AP U.S. Government 1.4 Political Beliefs and Behaviors. What sort of poll begins by building a demographic model?
AP U.S. Government 2.2 Political Beliefs and Behaviors 234 Views
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AP U.S. Government 2.2 Political Beliefs and Behaviors. A poll that attempts to determine if an issue is relevant to voters measures what?
Transcript
- 00:00
Thank you We sneak and here's your shmoop du jour
- 00:05
brought to you by stability home valuation for horses a
- 00:11
poll that attempt to determine if an issue is relevant
- 00:14
to voters measures what What does it measure distribution Sailing
- 00:21
alright well pole's not people from warsaw get that out
Full Transcript
- 00:24
of here pulls khun b particularly useful for politicians trying
- 00:28
to desperately you're honestly figure out which issues are most
- 00:32
important of voters so let's get into it Who pulls
- 00:35
that attempted to terminate and issue is relevant to voters
- 00:38
Measure a distribution well Distribution tells us what percentage of
- 00:42
people support or oppose a position which is useful for
- 00:44
politicians trying to figure out which way to vote on
- 00:47
a bill but that's not necessarily relevant to the question
- 00:50
at hand Could a poll that determines in issues relevancy
- 00:53
be measuring See intensity like fully caffeinated let's say if
- 00:57
school was voting on whether or not to ban cell
- 01:00
phones don't panic This is just hypothetical A pole measuring
- 01:04
intensity around the band would reveal surprise how intensely people
- 01:08
felt about the issue not how relevant that issue might
- 01:12
be to voters as a whole will do polls attempting
- 01:15
to capture relevancy measure stability well actually pulls measuring stability
- 01:20
tells us to what extent views on a particular issue
- 01:23
are changing Oh yes opinions on her mom's tuna casserole
- 01:27
might have been consistently negative for the last decade but
- 01:30
that doesn't necessarily mean the issue would make the general
- 01:32
public feels fishy as well What about the latent see
- 01:36
Well pulls dealing with leighton see try to suss out
- 01:39
what concerns leaking below the surface could potentially affect voters
- 01:43
opinions in the future For example if we were thinking
- 01:47
about passing a bill limiting the amount of sugar we
- 01:49
could put in serial we might want to pull the
- 01:51
public on just how fruity they like their loops So
- 01:54
sorry you're out What this means is that pulls attempting
- 01:57
to determine if an issue is relevant to voters measure
- 01:59
b salience salience is just a fancy word Meaning is
- 02:03
this important or relevant to me Because the point salient
- 02:07
and that little nugget helps pollsters figure out which issues
- 02:11
voters want to see addressed The option b is the
- 02:14
correct answer Once politicians figure out which topics are important
- 02:17
to voters they can change their beliefs entirely in order
- 02:20
To get elected Or they can just stick to their 00:02:22.82 --> [endTime] principles That works teo
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