AP US Govt.
Political Culture, Public Opinion, Political Participation
Read Wilson Chapters 4, 7, and 8 and answer the following questions.
1. What are the elements that the book identifies with our political culture? Do you agree?
2. What is the difference between equality of opportunity and equality of results?
3. What differences does our American political culture have with other countries’ political cultures?
4. Summarize (you can use bullet points) what the book says about the “culture war” in America.
5. What is the difference between internal and external efficacy? Look at the Figure 4.4 on p. 92 and figure out if you agree or disagree with these statements?
Public Opinion Chapter Seven 157-177
1. What was the Founders’ attitude towards public opinion? Give examples of how we see that attitude reflected in how they wrote the Constitution.
2. Identify three problems in assessing public opinion.
3. The book gives four factors that affect political attitudes. Identify those four factors and summarize the conclusions about how those factors and summarize the conclusions about how those factors affect people’s political attitudes. Memorize the list.
4.The book gives three factors that divide people’s political beliefs. Identify those three factors and summarize the conclusions about the correlation between these factors and people’s political opinions.
5. What were the meanings of the words “liberal” and “conservative” in the 19th century an how did these meanings change in the 20th century?
6. What are the three broad categories of opinion to which people subscribe? Make a chart or list showing how do liberals and conservatives feel about these three issues.
7. Summarize the four ideological labels the authors describe on pp. 170-171. Feel free to use a chart or bullet points for your summary.
8. What are the two reasons the book gives why activists tend to have more ideological consistency than those who aren’t active? What effect does those ideological consistency have on the difference ideologically between politicians and voters?
9. What does the term “new class” mean? What political ideology to those in the “new class” ascribe to? Why?
10. Why are there strains in the New Deal or traditional Democratic coalition?
11. How do elites influence public opinion? What are the limits to their ability to shape public opinion?
Political Participation Chapter 8 p. 177-196
1. Why does the book say that it is incorrect to say that Americans don’t vote as a result of apathy?
2. What did Congress pass to increase voter participation and what has been the result of that law?
3. How did states try to keep blacks from voting? Summarize those tactics and how they gradually were changed. What effect did the increase in black voting have on politics in the South?
4. What political effects have there been since the Nineteenth and Twenty-sixth Amendments?
5. Summarize the arguments as to why voter turnout has declined.
6. Make a list of the generalizations that the book makes about which groups tend to be more or less likely to vote. Memorize this list..
7. Summarize the five reasons the book gives for why Americans register and vote less frequently.
By the end of the unit, you will be responsible for being able to define and explain all these items.
1. Political Culture
2. Americanism
3. civic competence
4. civic duty
5. class consciousness
6. culture war
7. efficacy
8. equality of opportunity
9. external efficacy
10. internal efficacy
11. orthodox
12. political ideology
13. political culture
14. political efficacy
15. progressive
16. rights
17. secular humanism
18. work ethic
19. Conservative
20. elite
21. gender gap
22. John Q. Public
23. liberal
24. libertarians
25. Middle America
26. new-class
27. norm
28. partisanship
29. political elite
30. political ideology
31. poll
32. populists
33. pure conservatism
34. random sample
35. religious tradition
36. sampling error
37. silent majority
38. Public Opinion
39. Political Participation
40. activist
41. Australian ballot
42. campaigners
43. communalists
44. complete activists
45. Fifteenth Amendment
46. grandfather clause
47. inactives
48. literacy test
49. motor-voter bill
50. Nineteenth Amendment
51. parochial participants
52. poll tax
53. registered voters
54. Twenty-sixth Amendment
55. Twenty-third Amendment
56. Voting Rights Act of 1965
57. voting-age population
58. voting specialists
59. white primary