POLITICAL SCIENCE 473, Fall 2009
REVIEW
Questions for MIDTERM
EXAMINATION
See also, Terms from Brooker &
Schaefer & Class, linked on syllabus website
dr. Mark Peffley
Ground Rules: The exam is worth 35% of your final grade
and will consist of about 30 multiple choice questions and 1 to 4 short essay
questions. The review questions below are designed to focus your preparation on
theories and concepts from which the exam questions will be selected and
formulated. If you are prepared to answer these questions, you should do well
on the exam. During the exam, you may not rely on notes. Bring both a # pencil
for the multiple choice questions and a ball-point pen and a blue book for the
essay questions. Better essays will be organized and efficiently written.
The exam
will cover class discussions (see topics I – III on the web syllabus), chs. 1, 2, 3 4, 8 & 11 in Brooker and Schaefer, and
Hetherington & Weiler’s, Authoritarianism and Polarization in American Politics.
1.
Compare the two democratic theories (classic representative
and elitist) in terms of their historical background, the values on which they
are based, their view on human nature, the sophistication of public opinion,
and the role of masses and elites in the political process.
1.
What do the studies by Stouffer and Gibson say about
political tolerance during the McCarthy era in the U.S. and what are the
implications of these studies for the democratic theories we discussed in
class?
2.
Based on studies reviewed in class, what can we say about how
characteristics of countries influence levels of mass political tolerance?
3.
What are the basic findings and explanations of Sullivan, et
al.’s 1993 study, “Why Politicians are More Tolerant,” and what implications do
they have for the democratic theories we discussed in class?
4.
Based on survey findings reviewed
in class, what makes some people more tolerant than others, and what
implications do these findings have for the democratic theories we discussed in
class?
5.
Summarize the arguments and survey evidence that democratic
elitists use to evaluate the political sophistication of the ordinary citizen,
especially with respect to political information, attitude stability and the
rationality of citizens’ political decision-making.
6.
Evaluate the arguments and evidence made by representative
democratic theorists that defend the sophistication of the ordinary citizen,
especially with respect to political information and heuristics, the extent of
issue voting, and collective rationality.
7.
What are some of the major consequences of a lack of
political knowledge for individual citizens and the political system, according
to Delli Carpini and Keeter?
8.
Take the position of a classic representative theorist and do
your best to refute the charges of an elite democratic theorist who, using an
avalanche of early survey findings, makes the argument that the mass public
falls far short of the standards of democratic citizenship laid out in classic
representative theory. Drawing on class
discussions and the readings, make the strongest possible defense for the
sophistication of public opinion, but note potential problems with this defense
that we discussed in class.
9.
Based on your understanding of survey evidence on the levels of
political tolerance among masses and elites, which democratic theory provides a
better explanation of political tolerance in the
10. Evaluate
the theory of the survey response. What are the major axioms of the theory
(especially the last 3) and what implications does it have for the way people
respond to survey questions and to political messages in general?
11. Compare
and contrast the strengths and weaknesses of experiments with those of survey
research in attempting to understand public opinion. What are the conditions
under which one can infer causation using cross-sectional survey evidence? Is
there a single best method for studying public opinion or should one use a
plurality of methods? Explain.
12. You
are hired as a political consultant to conduct a poll for a political candidate
and you want to alert the candidate to some of the liabilities of polls without
dismissing them altogether. What do you
tell the candidate about the various stages of the polling process and whether
the candidate is wasting his/her money in hiring you to do a poll in the first
place? Draw from class and Brooker and Schaefer in formulating your answer.
13. Evaluate
the strengths and weaknesses of “other methods” of studying public opinion,
according to Brooker and Schaefer.
14. Drawing
from Brooker and Schaefer, describe some of the ways that partisanship and
ideological self-placement help to organizing public opinion in the
15. Based on our discussion of Hibbing &
Theiss-Morse’s (HTM) Stealth Democracy,
which is more important for explaining various facets of public opinion: a
policy gap or a process gap? Explain.
16. What is stealth government, according to HTM and how
is it related to the public’s false consensus, their views of masses and
elites, and their views on the utility of debate, compromise, and conflict?
17. What were some of the problems with the
conceptualization and measurement of authoritarianism (AU) in past research by Adorno et al and Altemeyer, and
how do Hetherington & Weiler (H&W) seek to
overcome these problems?
18. What is Morris Fiorina’s
view on mass polarization, and in what ways do Abramowitz’s research and
H&W’s definition of polarization differ from Fiorina’s
conclusions?
19. In what ways is the American electorate ideologically
innocent and what does this mean for the organization of mass belief systems?
20. How do H&W measure AU and establish the construct
validity of their measure?
21. What is an interaction and how do AU and perceived
threat interact in influencing various political attitudes (e.g., gay rights,
the use of military strength and Bush approval), according to H&W? How are their findings different from
previous studies?
22. Use the concepts of issue evolution, worldview
evolution, and party sorting to explain the growing polarization in American
politics, according to H&W.
23. How does AU help us to understand the struggles within
the two political parties during the nomination phase of the 2008 presidential
election, according to H&W?