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      The Politics of Re-Opening Schools Explaining Public Preferences Reopening Schools and Public Compliance with Reopening Orders During the COVID-19 Pandemic

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      1 ,
      American Politics Research
      SAGE Publications
      COVID-19, school reopening, public preferences

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          Abstract

          Due to the COVID-19 Pandemic, the decision to reopen schools for in-person instruction has become a pressing policy issue. This study examines what overall factors drive public support for schools re-opening in person and whether members of the public are willing to comply with school re-opening decisions based on their own preferences and/or the level of government from which the order comes. Through two rounds of national surveys with an embedded experiment, I find consistent evidence that 1) trust in information from elites - not contact with COVID - best explain preferences for reopening, 2) political ideology and racial and class identification help explain preferences as well, and 3) the President of the United States is best positioned to generate compliance with a school reopening mandate. This study suggests that politics - not public health - drives public support for schools reopening and compliance with government orders to reopen.

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          Most cited references28

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          The Nature and Origins of Mass Opinion

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            Is Anyone Responsible?

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              Messages Received: The Political Impact of Media Exposure.

              Analyses of the persuasive effects of media exposure outside the laboratory have generally produced negative results. I attribute such nonfindings in part to carelessness regarding the inferential consequences of measurement error and in part to limitations of research design. In an analysis of opinion change during the 1980 presidential campaign, adjusting for measurement error produces several strong media exposure effects, especially for network television news. Adjusting for measurement error also makes preexisting opinions look much more stable, suggesting that the new information absorbed via media exposure must be about three times as distinctive as has generally been supposed in order to account for observed patterns of opinion change.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Am Polit Res
                Am Polit Res
                spapr
                APR
                American Politics Research
                SAGE Publications (Sage CA: Los Angeles, CA )
                1532-673X
                1552-3373
                27 October 2022
                27 October 2022
                : 1532673X221135521
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Ringgold 6752, universityBrown University; , Providence, RI, USA
                Author notes
                [*]Jonathan E Collins, Brown University, Box 1938, Providence, RI, USA. Email: jonathan_collins@ 123456brown.edu
                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7296-1340
                Article
                10.1177_1532673X221135521
                10.1177/1532673X221135521
                9614594
                800fa130-a098-40d0-9807-c4c4f05f3fdf
                © The Author(s) 2022

                This article is made available via the PMC Open Access Subset for unrestricted re-use and analyses in any form or by any means with acknowledgement of the original source. These permissions are granted for the duration of the COVID-19 pandemic or until permissions are revoked in writing. Upon expiration of these permissions, PMC is granted a perpetual license to make this article available via PMC and Europe PMC, consistent with existing copyright protections.

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                covid-19,school reopening,public preferences
                covid-19, school reopening, public preferences

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