Friday, April 13, 2007

Study Shows College Students Know More About Politics Than American Idol

In a victory for young people everywhere, the stereotype of the self-involved, culture-obsessed U.S. college student is wrong, according to a new study.

Check out the article about the study here.

Among the findings:

* Half of the college students and 40 percent of the non-college students could name their respective members of Congress. Nearly two-thirds of college students and more than half of the non-college students could name at least one of their two U.S. senators. In contrast, only about 15 percent of the young people knew the name of the most recent winner of “American Idol” and about 10 percent knew the winner of “Dancing with the Stars.”

* Approximately 79 percent of college students and more than 73 percent of non-college students said they had voted in the November 2006 elections, but only 10 to 12 percent of respondents reported ever voting in “American Idol” and significantly fewer had voted in “Dancing with the Stars.”

* At least some of students’ Web activity is political. On average, college students belonged to almost four Facebook advocacy groups. According to the Tufts study, Facebook tends to be used more for advocacy of Democratic political candidates and liberal or Democratic causes than for Republican candidates or conservative or Republican causes.

* More than 61 percent of college students had participated in online political discussions or visited a politically oriented Web site.

So eat that!

1 Comments:

Blogger Unknown said...

i think these facts are great, they show that all college students aren't about just partying.

11:46 AM  

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