134 CHAPTER 5|PUBLIC OPINION AND THE MEDIA
Measuring Public Opinion
For the most part, information about public opinion comes from mass
surveys—that is, face-to-face or telephone interviews with hundreds or thou-
sands of voters. A mass survey seeks to measure the attitudes of a particular
DESCRIBE BASIC SURVEY
METHODS AND
POTENTIAL ISSUES
AFFECTING ACCURACY
THE IMPORTANCE OF GROUPS
TABLE »^ 5.1
“THE BIBLE IS THE
ACTUAL WORD OF GOD
AND IS TO BE TAKEN
LITERALLY, WORD FOR
WORD.” (PERCENTAGE
WHO AGREE)
“MEN ARE
BETTER SUITED
[THAN WOMEN]
FOR POLITICS.”
(PERCENTAGE
WHO AGREE)
“GOVERNMENT SHOULD
REDUCE THE INCOME
DIFFERENCES BETWEEN
THE RICH AND THE
POOR.” (PERCENTAGE WHO
STRONGLY AGREE)
Gender Male 28% 32% 17%
Female 39 31 22
Age 18–30 31% 27% 18%
31–40 35 26 18
41–55 34 39 19
Over 55 36 42 21
Education High school 38% 30% 18%
Bachelor’s degree 17 23 9
Advanced degree 11 17 11
Race White 30% 31% 16%
African American 56 31 33
Other 36 31 26
Family income Less than $15,000 43% 35% 39%
$15,000–$20,000 37 33 24
$20,000–$25,000 31 29 49
More than $25,000 17 25 18
Region New England 17% 23% 16%
Middle Atlantic 31 29 21
Midwest 32 31 20
South 52 43 19
Mountain 29 25 15
Pacifi c232717
Source: Data from 2010 General Social Survey, http://sda.berkeley.edu/archive.htm (accessed 9/15/12).