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2018 CSES

$844,784FY2018SBENSF

Harvard University, Cambridge MA

Investigators

Abstract

The 2018 CCES is a collaboration of over 50 different university research teams throughout the United States. Collectively this group designs and fields a large sample survey of at least 50,000 American adults. The survey measures demographics, opinions, and attitudes. The very large sample size allows researchers to have sufficient data to study states as well as the entire nation. The CCES, which started in 2006, makes available at very low cost a survey platform that is open to all. Since its inception, the project has involved more than 100 different research teams and hundreds of faculty and student researchers, and it has conducted interviews with over 250,000 American adults. The data from this project are used widely by researchers, journalists, and members of the public to understand public opinion. Few, if any, data infrastructure ventures in the discipline can boast participation from as many institutions and scholars as CCES has facilitated. The survey helps to create and sustain a network of researchers interested in survey design and public opinion. The 2018 CSES is developed by a consortium of research teams. Each research team that wishes to be involved in the project purchases a 1,000-person sample survey from the same firm. Each individual team determines half of the questions on its survey. The other half of the content (Common Content) is created by a design committee, drawn from the participating teams. Common Content consists of questions that every team would like to measure or questions that are of broad interest and require a very large sample. The project, thus, fields as many surveys as there are teams and also produces a single large sample survey that consists of the Common Content. The Common Content is designed by a committee in consultation with all teams involved in the survey. The survey will be fielded over the Internet, with samples constructed to be nationally representative. Each team will receive the data from its own 1,000-person survey and a dataset consisting of the 50,000+ observations from the Common Content survey. Survey data are validated using comparisons of state level election results to the survey results from the subsamples for each state. This award reflects NSF's statutory mission and has been deemed worthy of support through evaluation using the Foundation's intellectual merit and broader impacts review criteria.

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