Doing Empirical Political Research- End-of-Chapter Activities
InstructorsStudentsReviewersAuthorsBooksellers Contact Us
image
  DisciplineHome
 TextbookHome
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 Bookstore
Textbook Site for:
Doing Empirical Political Research
James M. Carlson, Providence College
Mark S. Hyde, Providence College
End-of-Chapter Activities
Chapter 3: Formulating Problems and Hypotheses

Activity 3.5
Reformulating Hypotheses

Indicate why each of the following statements needs reformulating and then offer a reformulation.
  1. "Ronald Reagan was a stronger president than Jimmy Carter."
  2. "The number of convicts on death row is greater in Texas than in Utah."
  3. "Republican electoral success is related to how the economy is doing."
  4. "Americans are generally satisfied with their congressional representative."
  5. "People who are dissatisfied with the government tend to exhibit political cynicism."
  6. "More legislation was passed by Congress in 1934 than in 1954."
  7. "Corruption among world leaders is related to average annual rainfall in their country's capital."
  8. "Political participation is high among residents of affluent suburbs."




BORDER=0
Site Map | Partners | Press Releases | Company Home | Contact Us
Copyright Houghton Mifflin Company. All Rights Reserved.
Terms and Conditions of Use, Privacy Statement, and Trademark Information
BORDER="0"