A study by three Kansas State University graduate students finds
that the 18- to 24-year-old demographic became more politically active
during the 2008 U.S. election season through the use of new media, but
that the young adults were not necessarily more knowledgeable about
politics. The K-State study examined young adults' media
consumption and the effects of new media on their political knowledge
and political activism. While the study showed that 18- to 24-year-olds
were actively engaging in politics through media such as blogs and
YouTube, their involvement did not increase their knowledge.
The
K-State researchers conducting the study, all master's students in
journalism and mass communications, were Keunyeong Kim, and Sookyong
Kim, both from Manhattan, and Chance York, Wamego. William Adams,
K-State professor of journalism and mass communications, was the
project adviser. The research was presented at the 2009 Association for
Education in Journalism and Mass Communication convention. "Politicians
in general are so reliant on political polling, but politicians are not
examining how much the voter knows about the issues they're voting on,"
York said.
The study targeted the 18- to 24-year-old
demographic and examined the group's usage of new media. The
researchers surveyed more than 160 undergraduate students in February
about their use of both traditional media sources, including radio
campaign commercials, and new media sources, like blogs, to obtain
information about presidential candidates and their campaign issues. "We
were trying to find what information sources 18- to 24-year olds were
looking at and how that might have affected their political activism
and their level of political knowledge," York said.
The
survey's measures for political activism included yes or no questions
that dealt with traditional and online forms of political involvement.
The traditional methods of activism included volunteering for a
presidential candidate's campaign or attending a candidate's rally,
while online forms of involvement included checking a presidential
candidate's campaign Web site. The measure for political knowledge was
similar to a current events quiz with questions like the name of the
U.S. secretary of defense. The survey also measured the
demographics of the students, including their political affiliation and
ideology and whether they voted in the 2008 election.
"We
found that the students were really politically active," York said.
"They talked about the campaigns with their friends, and a lot of
people got online on a social networking site to talk about the
campaigns. Not many wrote blogs, but a considerable amount kept up with
blogs." The study also found that most students were not
politically knowledgeable, York said. For instance, many students did
not know what Guantanamo Bay was; some said it was a Caribbean resort.
There
also was a set of people that were both politically active and
knowledgeable, and there was a high correlation between those two
variables and voting. "People who were actually voting were
both active and knowledgeable, and that wasn't affected by whether the
student was a Democrat or Republican, or liberal or conservative," York
said.
Additionally, the study indicated that among the 18- to
24-year-old demographic, the individuals who voted were not the ones
using new media to obtain political information. The
researchers also looked at the different types of new media, such as
those that would be considered "gatekeepers," where an editorial member
controls the flow of knowledge, and "gatewatchers," where information
flows more freely.
The study showed that the more people used
new media that would be considered "gatewatched," such as blogs, the
more likely they were to be politically active -- but not politically
knowledgeable. New media that would be "gatekept," such as online news
articles, had less of an impact on political activism and no
significant effect on political knowledge. Survey respondents' use of
traditional media did not play a significant role in their political
activism or political knowledge.
York said the study has limitations, particularly since the students were not selected from a random sample. "What
we can't say is that this is true for all 18-to 24-year-olds, and
statistically we can't make a significant inference," York said.
"However, there is not a lot of research in this area, and so trying to
forge out that path is a good start."