For example, in surveys in which the wife and husband were interviewed independently, their responses did not agree perfectly about such factual items as the number of children they had. Perhaps errors were made in transcribing their responses. Or perhaps the question was ambiguous. One spouse might have responded in terms of children living at home; the other in terms of the total number. Or one on spouse might have included children from a previous marriage, and the other might not have.
Something to make you think next time you read poll numbers.
fair enough, but those were measures of facts... opinion polls are trying to measure perception which is not always based on fact. For example, many americans think we spend to much money on foreign aid. However, we spend less on foreign aid than we do on most budget items. Perception, however, is reality, to borrow a bad cliche.
ReplyDeleteBut it is all very much dependent on how the questions are phrased. For example, asking if someone thinks the government should spend part of the budget to help feed starving children in [fill in the blank] is likely to get a yes. Using the words "foreign aid" might be more likely to get a no. I tend to ignore polls unless the questions are provided, as well as the demographics and numbers of people questioned.
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