25 results on '"Lay, J. Celeste"'
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2. Looking to the Future
- Author
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Greenberg, Mark, Rahmanou, Hedieh, Miller, Harris N., Kaufmann, Karen M., Lay, J. Celeste, Novelli, William D., and Goyer, Amy
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Women Running “as Women”: Candidate Gender, Campaign Issues, and Voter-Targeting Strategies
- Author
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Herrnson, Paul S., Lay, J. Celeste, and Stokes, Atiya Kai
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Partisanship on the Playground: Expressive Party Politics Among Children.
- Author
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Lay, J. Celeste, Holman, Mirya R., Greenlee, Jill S., Oxley, Zoe M., and Bos, Angela L.
- Subjects
- *
POLARIZATION (Social sciences) , *PARTISANSHIP , *GROUP identity , *POLITICAL socialization , *POLITICAL parties , *CHILDREN & politics - Abstract
The beliefs and behaviors of U.S. adults are increasingly sorted and polarized along partisan lines. We draw on studies of partisanship and social identity formation to argue that children develop partisanship as a social identity during the political socialization process. For a group of children, their partisan social identity produces an affective (and largely negative) evaluation of the political world. Analyzing survey data collected from 1500+ children ages 6–12 in 2017 and 2018, we show that some children develop a partisan identity as they learn about politics that operates similarly to other social identities like gender and race. Children's partisanship is associated with negative affective evaluations of politics, particularly leaders of the other political party. Using an innovative measurement tool, we show affective, negative reactions in children's open-ended responses, including when they are asked to draw a political leader. Other children simply learn about politics without developing partisan identities and thus hold more positive affective evaluations of the political system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Political Socialization and Reactions to Immigration-Related Diversity in Rural America
- Author
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Gimpel, James G. and Lay, J. Celeste
- Abstract
We explore the roots of tolerance for immigration-related diversity from a political socialization perspective. Among rural adolescent respondents, we find that attitudes toward immigrants are surprisingly variable along a number of important dimensions: anticipated socioeconomic status, family longevity in the community, and employment in agriculture. The extent to which an adolescent's family is anchored in the community proves to be an important determinant of diversity attitudes. Tolerance for diversity is also contextually conditioned by the percentage of immigrants settled in a neighborhood, and the percentage of the local population employed in farming. Interestingly, lower income youth are more welcoming of immigration than the affluent, particularly when they live near them. Without quite labeling these rural adolescent populations racially "progressive," the youth we encountered mostly expressed the norms of tolerance and civility essential for avoiding unpleasant intergroup conflict. (Contains 2 figures, 3 tables, and 4 footnotes.)
- Published
- 2008
6. Simulating a Senate Office: The Impact on Student Knowledge and Attitudes
- Author
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Lay, J. Celeste and Smarick, Kathleen J.
- Abstract
Although many instructors are now using simulations and other experiential pedagogies in their classrooms, the effectiveness of such tools has generally not been examined in a systematic way. In this paper, we assess the effectiveness of a simulation of the legislative process in the U.S. Senate as a tool for teaching college students about the workings of the American political system. We used pre- and post-course surveys in two "Introduction to American Government" courses, one of which utilized traditional teaching methods, such as lectures and tests, and one of which supplemented these traditional methods with an online simulation. We compare the changes in political knowledge and attitudes within groups but focus on the differences and similarities between the "control" and "experimental" groups. We find that simulations can be an effective tool for civic education, but that their objectives must be clear and expectations should be reasonable. Students who participated in the simulation gained considerable knowledge of the legislative process compared to their peers in the traditional course, and their levels of cynicism decreased. (Contains 1 figure, 3 tables and 6 notes.)
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Smaller Isn't Always Better: School Size and School Participation Among Young People
- Author
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Lay, J. Celeste
- Published
- 2007
8. Race, retrospective voting, and disasters: the re-election of C. Ray Nagin after hurricane Katrina
- Author
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Lay, J. Celeste
- Subjects
New Orleans, Louisiana -- Political aspects ,Hurricane Katrina, 2005 ,Mayors -- Elections ,Voting -- Analysis ,Government ,Political science ,Social sciences - Abstract
The 2006 New Orleans mayoral election provides a unique opportunity to examine the influence of a natural disaster on voting behavior. Theories of retrospective voting presume that voters will punish incumbents whose performance they deem unacceptable. To many Americans, Ray Nagin had done a poor job in handling Katrina. Theories of racial conflict and accommodation, however, contend that voters in urban elections base their choice primarily on racial group interests. This study shows that racial identity was a critical factor in vote choice. Although judgments of Nagin's performance were important, many voters placed greater responsibility on the federal government for the response. Keywords: Hurricane Katrina; New Orleans; racial conflict; retrospective voting; disasters
- Published
- 2009
9. Put to the test: understanding differences in support for high-stakes testing
- Author
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Lay, J. Celeste and Stokes-Brown, Atiya Kai
- Subjects
High-stakes tests -- Demographic aspects ,Education and state -- Demographic aspects ,Government ,Political science - Abstract
Despite the importance of high-stakes tests in education policy, relatively little is known about opinion on this issue. We examine racial and socioeconomic differences in support for high-stakes testing. Given the achievement gaps between racial minorities and Whites and between the lower and higher status, it would be reasonable to expect that those whose children are most likely to do well on high-stakes tests would support the policy, whereas their counterparts would oppose them. However, these groups have different histories with and optimism about the public education system as well as different perceptions about how high-stakes tests will affect their children. We find that Latinos strongly support these measures, whereas African Americans and Whites oppose them primarily because African Americans are pessimistic about improving public schools and Whites are concerned about how resources will be redistributed. We also find that those of higher status are more likely to oppose high-stakes testing. Keywords: education policy; no child left behind; high-stakes testing; standardized testing; public opinion; Latinos; African Americans
- Published
- 2009
10. This One's for the Boys: How Gendered Political Socialization Limits Girls' Political Ambition and Interest.
- Author
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BOS, ANGELA L., GREENLEE, JILL S., HOLMAN, MIRYA R., OXLEY, ZOE M., and LAY, J. CELESTE
- Subjects
POLITICS & gender ,POLITICAL socialization ,AMBITION ,PSYCHOLOGY of girls ,INTEREST (Psychology) ,PERCEPTION in children ,PSYCHOLOGY of boys - Abstract
This article develops and tests a new theoretical framework, gendered political socialization, which offers important insights into how children perceive gender in politics and the consequences of these perceptions on sex differences in political interest and ambition. Based on data from 1,604 children who live in four different regions across the United States, we find that children not only perceive politics to be a male-dominated space, but with age, girls increasingly see political leadership as a "man's world." Simultaneously, as children grow older, they internalize gendered expectations, which direct their interests toward professions that embody the gendered traits that fit with their own sex. One result of this mismatch between women and politics is that girls express lower levels of interest and ambition in politics than do boys. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Political socialization and reactions to immigration-related diversity in rural America
- Author
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Gimpel, James G. and Lay, J. Celeste
- Subjects
Multiculturalism -- Social aspects ,Political socialization -- Demographic aspects ,Rural youth -- Social aspects ,Immigrants -- Social aspects ,Sociology and social work - Abstract
We explore the roots of tolerance for immigration-related diversity from a political socialization perspective. Among rural adolescent respondents, we find that attitudes toward immigrants are surprisingly variable along a number of important dimensions: anticipated socioeconomic status, family longevity in the community, and employment in agriculture. The extent to which an adolescent's family is anchored in the community proves to be an important determinant of diversity attitudes. Tolerance for diversity is also contextually conditioned by the percentage of immigrants settled in a neighborhood, and the percentage of the local population employed in farming. Interestingly, lower income youth are more welcoming of immigration than the affluent, particularly when they live near them. Without quite labeling these rural adolescent populations racially 'progressive,' the youth we encountered mostly expressed the norms of tolerance and civility essential for avoiding unpleasant intergroup conflict.
- Published
- 2008
12. Learning about politics in low-income communities: poverty and political knowledge
- Author
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Lay J. Celeste
- Subjects
Political participation -- Analysis ,Poor -- Political aspects ,Poor -- Analysis ,Government ,Political science - Abstract
Many take for granted that children living in impoverished communities are disadvantaged on several social outcomes, including civic knowledge, because of their poverty and the circumstances that go along with this condition. However, most analyses of poor communities are conducted only in urban neighborhoods. In this article, the author examines the paradox of small-town life: On one hand, many rural areas and small towns are just as or even more impoverished than many urban neighborhoods; on the other hand, these same communities are praised as the most civically minded and politically knowledgeable places within the United States. How can two similarly poor community types produce such different outcomes? The author shows that the best explanation for these differences is the social interaction that characterizes small towns and rural areas. Political discussion within smaller towns is beneficial for adolescents' levels of political knowledge, whereas this discussion in urban areas is associated with lower levels of knowledge. Keywords: political knowledge; political engagement; civic engagement; political socialization; neighborhood effects; contextual effects; poverty
- Published
- 2006
13. Are You Picking Up What I Am Laying Down? Ideology in Low-Information Elections.
- Author
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Holman, Mirya R. and Lay, J. Celeste
- Subjects
- *
LOCAL elections , *ELECTIONS , *GENDER , *IDEOLOGY , *PARTISANSHIP , *HENS - Abstract
In November 2017, New Orleans elected the first woman, and first Black woman, mayor in the city's history. Voters were unable to rely on gender, race, or partisanship to differentiate between the candidates in the race. How, then, do voters make decisions absent traditional heuristics? Using an analysis of campaign materials and two-wave panel survey, we show that the candidates sent ideological signals with endorsements and issue foci and that voters responded by placing the candidates ideologically. Those voters who could not differentiate between the candidates' ideologies were less likely to turn out to vote and took longer to decide in the elections. Using a new measure of relative ideological distance adopted for multicandidate races, we show that the distance between each voter and the nearest candidates correlated with vote choice. Our results add to our knowledge of voting behavior and the use of ideology in local elections. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. TIME for Kids to Learn Gender Stereotypes: Analysis of Gender and Political Leadership in a Common Social Studies Resource for Children.
- Author
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Lay, J. Celeste, Holman, Mirya R., Bos, Angela L., Greenlee, Jill S., Oxley, Zoe M., and Buffett, Allison
- Subjects
SOCIAL sciences education ,POLITICAL leadership ,GENDER stereotypes ,POLITICIANS ,WOMEN leaders ,REPRESENTATIVE government ,KINDERGARTEN children ,SCHOOL children - Abstract
While early gendered messages mold children's expectations about the world, we know relatively little about the depictions of women in politics and exposure to gender stereotypes in elementary social studies curricula. In this article, we examine the coverage of political leaders in the children's magazine TIME for Kids, a source commonly found in elementary school classrooms. Coding all political content from this source over six years, we evaluate the presence of women political leaders and rate whether the leaders are described as possessing gender-stereotypic traits. Our results show that although TIME for Kids covers women leaders in greater proportion than their overall representation in politics, the content of the coverage contains gendered messages that portray politics as a stereotypically masculine field. We show that gendered traits are applied differently to men and to women in politics: feminine and communal traits are more likely to be applied to women leaders, while men and women are equally described as having masculine and agentic traits. Portrayals of women political leaders in stereotype-congruent ways is problematic because early messages influence children's views of gender roles. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. 100 Years of Suffrage and Girls Still Struggle to Find their "Fit" in Politics.
- Author
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Bos, Angela L., Holman, Mirya R., Greenlee, Jill S., Oxley, Zoe M., and Lay, J. Celeste
- Abstract
When women gained the national right to vote 100 years ago, remarkable possibilities for their voice and presence in politics opened. However, despite gains in women's representation, numerous gaps continue to exist in which adult women engage less in politics than men. In identifying and explaining adult gender gaps, little attention has been given to whether gaps emerge among children. This is a pressing issue because children's perceptions are likely to influence their participation as adults. This article explores whether and how girls and boys differently view politics and their role in it. We report survey data from more than 1,600 children ages 6 to 12 to explore basic gender gaps in political interest and ambition. We argue that these results may reveal the roots of a larger problem: 100 years after women gained suffrage, girls still express less interest and enthusiasm than boys for political life and political office. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. How Katrina Shaped Trust and Efficacy in New Orleans.
- Author
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Holman, Mirya R. and Lay, J. Celeste
- Subjects
- *
HURRICANE Katrina, 2005 , *DEMOGRAPHIC change , *AFRICAN Americans , *POPULATION , *IMMIGRANTS , *NEIGHBORS - Abstract
In 2005, Hurricane Katrina led to substantial demographic changes in New Orleans. The city lost large numbers of its African American population and became more diverse with the arrival of more Latino migrants and more highly educated, affluent white newcomers. Demographic change has the potential to depress political trust, efficacy, and trust in others. In this essay, we show that more than 10 years after Katrina, neither white nor Black New Orleanians trust local or national government. Black residents, particularly Black women, are generally more distrustful of their neighbors, whites, Latinos, and newcomers in the city. White newcomers are more efficacious and trusting than pre-Katrina white residents. These findings provide more evidence for the thesis that race and place shape trust and that Katrina continues to have an impact on New Orleans in distinctly racialized ways. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Children's Views of the American Presidency.
- Author
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Oxley, Zoe M, Holman, Mirya R, Greenlee, Jill S, Bos, Angela L, and Lay, J Celeste
- Subjects
PRESIDENTS of the United States ,SCHOOL children ,ELEMENTARY schools ,POLITICAL socialization ,PUBLIC opinion - Abstract
What do children think about political leaders? In classic political socialization studies of the late 1950s, children tended to hold idealized views of political leaders. In spite of enormous changes in the political landscape, we know little about how these attitudes have changed in the last 60 years. To assess the views of children today, we surveyed over 500 elementary school children (grades 1–6) in the United States. Children no longer possess favorable views of the president. However, the institution of the presidency continues to be held in high esteem. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Private Governance of Public Schools: Representation, Priorities, and Compliance in New Orleans Charter School Boards.
- Author
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Lay, J. Celeste and Bauman, Anna
- Subjects
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CHARTER schools , *PUBLIC schools , *SCHOOL boards , *EDUCATIONAL leadership , *EDUCATIONAL finance - Abstract
In many cities, charter schools make up an increasing proportion of public schools, substantially altering education governance. In New Orleans, nearly every public school student attends a charter school. Each charter school or network has its own private governing board responsible for obtaining and maintaining the school's charter, school finances, and hiring school leadership. We know relatively little about the composition, priorities, or effectiveness of these boards. In this article, we find that New Orleans's charter boards are unrepresentative, are focused on fiduciary responsibilities rather than academics, and routinely fail to comply with state transparency laws. As more schools and other public services in urban areas move to private governance, it is important to examine the people who compose the boards, their decision-making processes, and the extent of public involvement. New Orleans provides a cautionary tale of how this governance system could operate in other cities with growing charter sectors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Policy Learning and Transformational Change: University Policies on Sexual Harassment.
- Author
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Lay, J. Celeste
- Subjects
- *
METOO movement , *SEXUAL harassment in universities & colleges , *POLITICAL science conventions - Abstract
This essay comes out of my experience as an attendee at the #MeTooPoliSci short course in the American Political Science Association meeting in 2018. I use the framework of policy feedback theory to explain the difficulty in reforming sexual harassment policies at universities and prescribe some actions we as scholars can take to improve the situations at our places of employment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. They See Dead People (Voting): Correcting Misperceptions about Voter Fraud in the 2016 U.S. Presidential Election.
- Author
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Holman, Mirya R. and Lay, J. Celeste
- Subjects
- *
UNITED States presidential election, 2016 , *CORRUPT practices in elections , *REPUBLICANS - Abstract
The 2016 US Presidential election was unique for many reasons, especially the widespread endorsement of falsehoods about the candidates and the electoral process. Using a unique experiment fielded the week prior to the election, we examine whether correcting information can overcome misperceptions about election fraud. We find that providing counter information is generally ineffective at remedying misperceptions and can, depending on the source, increase endorsements of misperceptions among Republicans. Although information from a fact-checking source is generally unconvincing, when given with evidence from an unlikely source – in our experiment, Breitbart News – both Republicans and Democrats decrease beliefs in voter fraud. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. The Buck Stops with the Education Mayor: Mayoral Control and Local Test Scores in U.S. Urban Mayoral Elections.
- Author
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Lay, J. Celeste and Tyburski, Michael D.
- Abstract
Several U.S. cities have turned control of their schools from elected boards to the mayor. Advocates of mayoral control have argued that this structure allows voters to hold the mayor directly accountable for the performance of local schools. Now that public schools have to report their test scores each year, it is possible for voters to attribute responsibility for test scores. This article analyzes survey data from 16 cities in the United States that have been matched with data on test scores. We find that, in general, test score changes are not associated with support for incumbent mayors, except in districts with mayoral control, where voters reward incumbents when test scores rise. Further, voters' beliefs about local schools condition their support for the incumbent. In cities with mayoral control, voters who evaluate schools positively reward mayors while voters who believe their schools are poor are not swayed by this positive information. Related Articles [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. She Was Born in a Small Town: The Advantages and Disadvantages in Political Knowledge and Efficacy for Rural Girls.
- Author
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Lay, J. Celeste
- Subjects
- *
RURAL women , *POLITICAL knowledge , *POLITICAL socialization , *POLITICAL participation - Abstract
Recent work suggests that girls learn more about politics and are more efficacious in places with less conflict and greater homogeneity. Given that rural communities are often more homogeneous than metropolitan areas across several dimensions, this article asks whether young girls growing up in rural communities have higher levels of political knowledge and efficacy than those in more urban, diverse communities. It argues that the average girl benefits from the stronger social bonds between residents in smaller places, but young women who hold minority views about the importance of equality are likely to suffer in their levels of knowledge and efficacy. Being in the minority seems to be particularly difficult for girls in smaller places. This article raises questions about the ways in which gender gaps vary across different places and the varying effects of minority status. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Ignorance Is Bliss.
- Author
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Lay, J. Celeste
- Subjects
- *
SCHOOL choice , *ACCESS to information , *EDUCATION , *EDUCATIONAL change , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors - Abstract
After Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans eliminated default neighborhood schools and began to require parents to choose a school for their child. There are many new schools and a new enrollment process, making accurate and comprehensive information essential. Is one’s information source related to satisfaction in their choices? Psychological theories suggest that more information may not always be better; people can be overwhelmed and actually make suboptimal choices. I show that a greater reliance on comprehensive sources is related to less confidence that one’s child got into their top choice school, while those parents who use shortcuts, such as social networks and/or school advertising, are more satisfied that they made the right choice. Information sources are not, however, related to the likelihood of enrolling one’s child in a high performing school. Rather, the school performance score is predicted by race and socioeconomic class. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Polling in Impossible Conditions: Pre-election Polling in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina.
- Author
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Brox, Brian J. and Lay, J. Celeste
- Subjects
ELECTION forecasting ,HURRICANE Katrina, 2005 ,LOUISIANA state politics & government - Abstract
Just months after Hurricane Katrina made landfall, New Orleans held a mayoral election. With so many displaced residents, it was difficult to gauge attitudes, but there are perhaps few more important situations in which the public's attitudes need to be examined. This paper examines the methodological challenges with survey research in the aftermath of a natural disaster. We conducted a traditional survey just days before the election and attempted to correct for our inability to reach particular segments of the population through post-stratification weights. The results of our poll were relatively accurate for all of the candidates but one-the winner. We recommend in the aftermath of a disaster that researchers provide not only a range of possible outcomes, but also that they should consider other methods, such as focus groups, and alter the usual questions to account for the post-disaster context. Given that the opinion environment after a major disaster is marked by indecision and confusion, it is not surprising that respondents were unsure of their vote choice and/or changed their mind just before the election. Our experience should provide some caution to researchers seeking to measure opinion in these circumstances. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
25. Four Commentaries: Looking to the Future.
- Author
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Greenberg, Mark, Rahmanou, Hedich, Miller, Harris N., Kaufmann, Karen M., Lay, J. Celeste, Novelli, William D., and Goyer, Amy
- Subjects
- *
GOVERNMENT policy , *CHILDREN of immigrants , *INTERNET & children , *POLITICAL participation of minorities , *FOREIGN workers , *IMMIGRANTS - Abstract
Presents several views on policies needed to promote development, productivity and well-being of children of immigrant families in the U.S. Steps to enhance employment prospects of the immigrant parents; Improvement of broadband access to the Internet; Enhancement of political participation among racial minorities and immigrants.
- Published
- 2004
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