Anticipated Future Political Participation: A College Student Sample
Principal Investigator(s): View help for Principal Investigator(s) Dena Pastor, James Madison University; Chris Patterson, James Madison University; Abraham Goldberg, James Madison University
Version: View help for Version V1
Name | File Type | Size | Last Modified |
---|---|---|---|
codebook.pdf | application/pdf | 154.8 KB | 01/29/2021 07:04:AM |
frequencies of variables in pastoretal.pdf | application/pdf | 138.8 KB | 01/29/2021 07:04:AM |
pastoretal.sas7bdat | application/x-sas-data | 448 KB | 01/29/2021 07:04:AM |
survey.pdf | application/pdf | 218.2 KB | 01/29/2021 07:05:AM |
Project Citation:
Pastor, Dena, Patterson, Chris, and Goldberg, Abraham. Anticipated Future Political Participation: A College Student Sample. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor], 2021-03-08. https://doi.org/10.3886/E134261V1
Project Description
Summary:
View help for Summary
Data include responses from college students at a single university to sixteen items on the anticipated future engagement section of the Political Engagement Project Survey (PEPS; Beaumont, Colby, Ehrlich, and Torney-Purta, 2006), a survey used for the
assessment of political engagement programs in higher education. Data were collected for institutional accountability purposes during required university-wide Assessment Days and used by researchers in a subsequent study to group college students into four
classes based on their expected type of future civic and political engagement. Latent class analysis (LCA) was used to categorize students into groups and class differences in gender, race, political ideology, and political knowledge
were examined to acquire validity evidence for the 4-class solution,
The sample consists of 708 college students at James Madison University, a public, master’s level institution in the mid-Atlantic with about 20,000 undergraduate and 2,000 graduate students. The 708 college students in the sample completed the PEPS during one of three university-wide Assessment Days (Pastor et al., 2019). All undergraduates at the university are required to attend Assessment Day twice: once as entering first-years and again when they have amassed 45 to 70 credit hours. Data from Assessment Days were combined to create the sample, with 22%, 52%, and 25% of the 708 students being tested in the Fall 2017, Spring 2018, and Spring 2019 administrations, respectively. The distribution of gender and race in the sample aligns with the overall distribution at the university, with 59% of the sample identifying as females and 75% identifying as White. The sample was comprised of freshman (21%), sophomores (58%), and juniors (21%), but no seniors.
The data file contains:1) the responses to each item (both on the original 1 to 6 Likert scale and in two different dichotomized forms), 2) the latent class assignment from the researchers' 4-class model (using modal assignment), 3) gender (as both a numerical and character variable), ethnicity, scores on two separate measures of political knowledge and political ideology.
References:
Beaumont, Elizabeth, Anne Colby, Thomas Ehrlich, and Judith Torney-Purta. 2006. “Promoting Political Competence and Engagement in College Students: An Empirical Study.” Journal of Political Science Education 2(3): 249-70. doi: 10.1080/15512160600840467.
Pastor, Dena A., Kelly J. Foelber, Jessica N. Jacovidis, Keston H. Fulcher, Derek C. Sauder, and Paula D. Love. 2019. “University-Wide Assessment Days: The James Madison University Model.” The AIR Professional File Spring 2019: 1-13.
The sample consists of 708 college students at James Madison University, a public, master’s level institution in the mid-Atlantic with about 20,000 undergraduate and 2,000 graduate students. The 708 college students in the sample completed the PEPS during one of three university-wide Assessment Days (Pastor et al., 2019). All undergraduates at the university are required to attend Assessment Day twice: once as entering first-years and again when they have amassed 45 to 70 credit hours. Data from Assessment Days were combined to create the sample, with 22%, 52%, and 25% of the 708 students being tested in the Fall 2017, Spring 2018, and Spring 2019 administrations, respectively. The distribution of gender and race in the sample aligns with the overall distribution at the university, with 59% of the sample identifying as females and 75% identifying as White. The sample was comprised of freshman (21%), sophomores (58%), and juniors (21%), but no seniors.
The data file contains:1) the responses to each item (both on the original 1 to 6 Likert scale and in two different dichotomized forms), 2) the latent class assignment from the researchers' 4-class model (using modal assignment), 3) gender (as both a numerical and character variable), ethnicity, scores on two separate measures of political knowledge and political ideology.
References:
Beaumont, Elizabeth, Anne Colby, Thomas Ehrlich, and Judith Torney-Purta. 2006. “Promoting Political Competence and Engagement in College Students: An Empirical Study.” Journal of Political Science Education 2(3): 249-70. doi: 10.1080/15512160600840467.
Pastor, Dena A., Kelly J. Foelber, Jessica N. Jacovidis, Keston H. Fulcher, Derek C. Sauder, and Paula D. Love. 2019. “University-Wide Assessment Days: The James Madison University Model.” The AIR Professional File Spring 2019: 1-13.
Scope of Project
Subject Terms:
View help for Subject Terms
college students
Geographic Coverage:
View help for Geographic Coverage
Harrisonburg, VA
Time Period(s):
View help for Time Period(s)
8/2017 – 2/2019 (Fall 2017, Spring 2018, and Spring 2019)
Collection Date(s):
View help for Collection Date(s)
8/2017 – 2/2019 (Fall 2017, Spring 2018, Spring 2019)
Universe:
View help for Universe
College students at James Madison University, a public, master’s level institution in the mid-Atlantic with about 20,000 undergraduate and 2,000 graduate students.
Data Type(s):
View help for Data Type(s)
survey data
Methodology
Response Rate:
View help for Response Rate
Not applicable
Sampling:
View help for Sampling
Data were collected during one of three university-wide Assessment Days (Pastor et al., 2019). All undergraduates at the university are required to attend Assessment Day twice: once as entering first-years (Fall Assessment Day) and again when they have amassed 45 to 70 credit hours (Spring Assessment Day). Data from Assessment Days were combined to create the sample, with 22%, 52%, and 25% of the 708 students being tested in the Fall 2017, Spring 2018, and Spring 2019 administrations, respectively.
Pastor, Dena A., Kelly J. Foelber, Jessica N. Jacovidis, Keston H. Fulcher, Derek C. Sauder, and Paula D. Love. 2019. “University-Wide Assessment Days: The James Madison University Model.” The AIR Professional File Spring 2019: 1-13.
Pastor, Dena A., Kelly J. Foelber, Jessica N. Jacovidis, Keston H. Fulcher, Derek C. Sauder, and Paula D. Love. 2019. “University-Wide Assessment Days: The James Madison University Model.” The AIR Professional File Spring 2019: 1-13.
Collection Mode(s):
View help for Collection Mode(s)
on-site questionnaire
Scales:
View help for Scales
The data file contains responses ro items/subscales on the Political Engagement Project Survey, specifically:
- a subset of Anticipated Future Engagement Items
- foundational knowledge subscale
- political ideology item
Weights:
View help for Weights
none
Unit(s) of Observation:
View help for Unit(s) of Observation
individuals
Geographic Unit:
View help for Geographic Unit
Not applicable
Related Publications
Published Versions
Report a Problem
Found a serious problem with the data, such as disclosure risk or copyrighted content? Let us know.
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.