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Past Event

University of Michigan and the Brookings Institution

Reporting on Public Opinion Polls: Can We Do Better?

U.S. Politics, Elections, Politics, Media & Journalism


Event Summary

Polls have become a mainstay of political reporting in the United States. They promise to be a prominent feature of the coverage, by broadcast and print journalists, of the 2000 election campaign. But how accurate is the information about public opinion that is conveyed to the citizenry? And how useful are poll-based stories in providing information relevant to elections and policymaking?

Event Information

When

Wednesday, July 28, 1999
9:00 AM to

Where

Stein Room
The Brookings Institution
1775 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W.
Washington, DC 20036
Map

Contact: Brookings Office of Communications

E-mail: events@brookings.edu

Phone: 202.797.6105

This briefing, based on research conducted at the University of Michigan by the Pew Charitable Trust Project on "The Role of Polling in a Civil Society," will include a systematic review of the problems that journalists commonly encounter when reporting on polls. Examples of good and bad practice when reporting poll results will be presented. Guidelines for preparing stories on public opinion data that will inform and educate the public without providing misleading information will also be presented.

Participants

Presiding

Thomas E. Mann

Senior Fellow, Governance Studies

Speakers

Professor Paul Lavrakas

Director, Survey Research Center
Ohio State University

Professor Vincent Price

Annenberg School of Communications
University of Pennsylvania

Professor Michael Traugott

Center for Political Studies
University of Michigan


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