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The Chronicle of Higher Education: Facts & Figures

From the issue dated May 7, 2004


The Chronicle Survey of Public Opinion on Higher Education


(AP/Wide World)


The Chronicle of Higher Education's Survey of Public Opinion on Higher Education consisted of 1,000 telephone interviews, of 20 minutes each, with a random selection of men and women ages 25 to 65. It was conducted from February 25 to March 21, 2004. The survey was designed by George Dehne, in conjunction with The Chronicle, and the interviews were conducted by TMR Inc., of Broomall, Pa. The data were collected and analyzed by GDA Integrated Services, a marketing-and-research company based in Old Saybrook, Conn.

The sample was generated using random-digit-dialing methodology. For a randomly obtained sample of 1,000, a conservative estimate of the margin of sampling error for 95-percent confidence intervals is plus or minus 3.1 percentage points. Figures may not add up to 100 percent because of rounding.

Fifty-eight percent of the respondents were women, and 42 percent were men. All states except Alaska and Hawaii are represented in the sample. Eleven percent of the respondents are African-American, accurately representing the U.S. population, but because of language barriers, only 6 percent are Hispanic, about eight percentage points below the national proportion. In all other ways, including the geographic distribution of respondents, their religious and political affiliations, and their household incomes, the sample mirrors the U.S. population.


http://chronicle.com
Section: Special Report
Volume 50, Issue 35, Page A12


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Copyright © 2004 by The Chronicle of Higher Education