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Volu m e II - Purdue University Calumet

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education group, and the high- education group gave the most democratic response to every question,<br />

whether compared with other educational, community or in- come grouping” (1960). The two<br />

researchers also concluded that, more correct answers “came from those with high education than from<br />

those with less education” (Prothro & Grigg, 1960). In order to determine whether this effect was<br />

spurious in terms of the disproportional amount of highly educated respondents in the sample, they tested<br />

the other control variables and determined that education still had the same influence (Prothro & Grigg,<br />

1960). They concluded that, “people with high education accept democratic principles more than any<br />

other grouping” (Prothro & Grigg, 1960).<br />

A similar empirical study was performed by Herbert McClosky (1964). He investigated the level of<br />

support for democratic principles between the “political elite” (individuals educated in political matters) and<br />

the general population (McClosky, 1964). He predicted that the political elite will “exhibit a more<br />

meaningful and far reaching consensus on democratic and constitutional values than will the general<br />

population” (McClosky, 1964). He developed a research process that included “two separate samples”, one<br />

of 3,000 respondents “drawn from the delegates and altern- ates who had attended the Democratic and<br />

Republican conventions of 1956” (McClosky, 1964). The second sample consisted of a representative<br />

sample of 1,500 US adults from a Gallup Poll (McClosky, 1964). Respondents from both samples<br />

“received the same questionnaire” that consisted of questions in terms of two categories: “Rules of the game<br />

and democratic values” (McClosky, 1964). Rules of the game questions consist of those pertaining to<br />

specific values of democratic rights, especially those with “particular emphasis upon fair play, respect for<br />

legal procedures, and consideration for the rights of others” (McClosky, 1964). The democratic values are<br />

the basic democratic principles such as those that “express belief in freedom of speech and opinion” in an<br />

abstract way, and don’t emphasize a specific action (McClosky, 1964).<br />

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