Political Socialization & Media Study Guide

Political Socialization & Media Study Guide

Mr. Harrington

AP US Government

Political Socialization & Media Study Guide

Chapter 9 Main Ideas

Public Opinion Basics

  • Be able to recite definition of public opinion

Be able to reference how public opinion affects our government

  • Framers
  • Direct elections of the House of Representatives
  • Powers of the House (impeach, revenue bills, vote if no candidate receives 270) are all given to enhance public opinion in our government
  • 2 year terms
  • Amendment process (Can be initiated by the people)
  • 10th amendment: Not in the constitution? Power falls to the state
  • Progressive Era
  • Initiative, referendum, recall, direct primary
  • Congressional voting
  • Delegate: voting on how the people back home would want them to vote

Be able to reference how public opinion does not affect our government

  • Framers
  • Senators were originally chosen by state legislatures
  • James Madison’s “Federalist #10” warns against dangerous factions and their threat to our government
  • Congressional Voting
  • Partisan: voting with the party

The Distribution of Public Opinion

  • Know the components to conducting a valid poll (how would one know if the poll is trustworthy?
  • Be familiar with how candidates for political office use public opinion polls
  • What is a straw poll?
  • What exactly is the margin of error in regards to polling

Political Socialization

  • Be familiar with the definition of political socialization
  • Be familiar with the Agents of Early Socialization (strongest to weakest). Two ideas to remember: 1. Political socialization continues throughout life. 2. The extent to which any political socializing agent is influential depends upon: Repetitive behavior, whether or not a person is familiar with the concepts before hearing it, the economic influence of the agent, & whether the family favorably supports the agent.
  • Why is childhood important for political socialization?
  • If your parents identify themselves with one political party and you disagree, where would you fall on the political spectrum?

Social Groups And Political Ideology

Democrat

  • Women
  • Lower educated
  • Blue Collar
  • African Americans
  • East & West Coast
  • Urban

Republican

  • Evangelical
  • Higher educated (But not elite)
  • White Collar
  • Midwest
  • South
  • Rural

Chapter 5 Vocabulary

  1. Public opinion
  2. Political values
  3. Socioeconomic status
  4. Gender gap
  5. Straw poll
  6. Random sampling
  7. Margin of error
  8. Honeymoon period
  9. Rally-around-the-flag effect

Chapter 10 Main Ideas

Traditional Roles of the Media

  • Gatekeeper (Decides what is important and what is not)
  • Scorekeeper (Tracks elections like a horserace)
  • Watchdog (Role enhanced since Watergate Scandal. Making sure that elected officials are following the law)

Does the media display bias?

  • Overall there is a slant towards liberalism in print sources
  • However, talk radio displays a conservative bias

Functions of the Mass Media

  1. Reporting the News
  2. Interpreting and Presenting the News
  3. Influencing Public Opinion
  4. Setting the Public Agenda
  5. Socializing the Citizenry

The Development of The Mass Media In The United States
-Newspapers
-Magazines
-Radio
-Television
-The Internet

  • How has the news media in the United States has been shaped?
  • What exactly is mass media?

Private Ownership of The Media

  • What are the Consequences of Private Ownership? (Profit motivated, less diversity, more infotainment)
  • The Concentration of Private Ownership (What is happening today)
  • How exactly does the media cover elections? (Horserace journalism)

Media Influence on Politics

Be familiar with the following concepts

  • Agenda Setting
  • Priming
  • Framing
  • Persuasion

Chapter 10 Vocabulary

  1. Print media
  2. Broadcast media
  3. New media
  4. Penny Press
  5. Market-driven journalism
  6. Soft news
  7. Infotainment
  8. Libel
  9. Actual malice standard
  10. Federal Communications Commission
  11. Net neutrality
  12. Yellow journalism
  13. Muckraking
  14. Agenda Setting
  15. Priming
  16. Framing
  17. Watchdogs
  18. Paid media
  19. Free media