COVID-19, Crises, and Public Support for the Rule of Law Teaching Modules
Principal Investigator(s): View help for Principal Investigator(s) Taylor Kinsley Chewning, Florida State University; Bailey Johnson, Florida State University; Amanda Driscoll, Florida State University; Jay N. Krehbiel, West Virginia University; Michael J. Nelson, The Pennsyvania State University
Version: View help for Version V4
Name | File Type | Size | Last Modified |
---|---|---|---|
COVID19CrisesROL_TeachingModule1 | 08/14/2020 03:39:PM | ||
COVID19CrisesROL_TeachingModule2 | 08/14/2020 05:05:PM | ||
COVID19CrisesROL_TeachingModule3 | 08/14/2020 03:31:PM |
Project Citation:
Project Description
The modules are based on research funded by the National Science Foundation, which contain original surveys of U.S. and German residents collected since the onset of the global crisis. The first two modules examine the shift in time spent outside the home before and after crisis onset, and in response to governmentally imposed stay-at-home orders. The third module shifts focus to the public’s (in)tolerance for non-compliance with mask-wearing ordinances in the United States. Through these modules, instructors and students can engage with an issue that is happening in real time, and explore how implicit biases may shape willingness to punish non-compliance with local mandates.
These modules are targeted towards advanced undergraduates in applied statistics or upper-division courses; students are asked to engage the use of descriptive statistics, data visualization, hypothesis testing, bivariate and multivariate regression. Further, modules two and three also include experimental components of the research design, which may lend themselves to discussions regarding observational vs. experimental research, causal identification, and potential threats to inference.
Each module includes the dataset, assignments, codebooks and documentation as well as the R and Stata code used to answer the questions. For an answer key, instructors may contact the authors directly, using their university affiliated email address. These data and teaching modules are based on data from Driscoll, Krehbiel and Nelson, 2020 “RAPID: COVID-19, Crises and Support for the Rule of Law,” National Science Foundation, SES-2027653, SES-2027664, SES-2027671. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.
Instructors interested in the answer key for these teaching modules should contact Taylor Chewning (tkc19@my.fsu.edu) via your institutional email address.
Scope of Project
Persons aged 18 and over living in the United States with an internet connection and seeking `hits' on Mechanical Turk (Amazon).
The data contained in teaching module 2 (Germany lock-downs and income) based on an (unweighted) sample from of a nationally representative survey in Germany, administered by YouGov between April 18 and May 15 of 2020. This study was cleared by the West Virginia Institutional Review Board (#2003938143).
Methodology
For the German data, 4729 respondents were interviewed who were then matched down to a sample of 4400 to produce the final wave 1 dataset. See Collection Notes and Sampling for more detail.
For the data used in Module 3 (US MTurk, June 3, 2020), the recruitment text was posted on Mechanical Turk inviting respondents to answer a short survey about support for institutions and policies in the United States. We recruited 1506 respondents in total. Please see Collection Notes for additional details.
U.S. data were both convenience samples, recruited on Mechanical Turk.
Related Publications
Published Versions
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This material is distributed exactly as it arrived from the data depositor. ICPSR has not checked or processed this material. Users should consult the investigator(s) if further information is desired.