11.0 Chapter introduction

In 2008, United States voters elected our first African American president, Barack Obama. It may not surprise you to learn that when President Obama was coming of age in the 1970s, one-quarter of Americans reported they would not vote for a qualified African American presidential nominee. When Obama began his presidential campaign three decades later, fewer than 8% of Americans still held that position, and President Obama won the election (Smith, 2009). [1] We have information about these voter opinion trends because the General Social Survey (http://www.norc.uchicago.edu/GSS+Website), a nationally representative survey of American adults, included questions about race and voting over the years described here. Without survey research, we may not know how Americans’ perspectives on race and the presidency shifted over these years.

Chapter Outline

  • 11.1 Survey research: What is it and when should it be used?
  • 11.2 Strengths and weaknesses of survey research
  • 11.3 Types of surveys
  • 11.4 Designing effective questions and questionnaires

Content Advisory

This chapter discusses or mentions the following topics: racism, mental health, terrorism and 9/11, substance use, and sexism and ageism in the workplace.


  1. Smith, T. W. (2009). Trends in willingness to vote for a black and woman for president, 1972–2008. GSS Social Change Report No. 55. Chicago, IL: National Opinion Research Center.

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Scientific Inquiry in Social Work Copyright © 2018 by Matthew DeCarlo is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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