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Subject: AEJ 95 DentonF NWS Effects of multimedia project on political knowledge
From: Elliott Parker <[log in to unmask]>
Reply-To:AEJMC Conference Papers <[log in to unmask]>
Date:Sun, 4 Feb 1996 11:06:46 EST
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Effects of a Multimedia Public Journalism Project
 on Political Knowledge and Attitudes
 
 
 
 
 
Frank Denton
University of Wisconsin-Madison
 
Esther Thorson
University of Missouri at Columbia
 
James Coyle
University of Missouri at Columbia
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Prepared for submission to the Association for Education in Journalism and
 
          Mass Communication, 1995.
 
The authors thank the Pew Center for Civic Journalism for its support of
 
          this research.
 
 
 ABSTRACT
        Disconnections among the people, their political processes and the media
 
          have resulted in widespread perceptions of alienated and apathetic
 
    non-voters, unresponsive and manipulative politicians and ineffectual
 
       media.  In this field experiment, a concentrated, concerted
          public-journalism campaign across three media and four media outlets
 
      addressed some apparent causes of these disconnections by structuring
media
 reports to be comprehensible, by coordinating different media, by
 
    directing media content and by providing information specifically to
 
      empower citizens.  Results indicated that respondents were well aware of
 
          the public-journalism project and, as a result, were more interested
in and
 knowledgeable about the election and more likely to vote.  The parti
 
      cipating media succeeded in communicating specific political information,
 
          particularly tools to empower citizens.  Negative advertising raised
some
 
          knowledge levels but also encouraged cynicism about politics. The
 
   public-journalism project made respondents feel more positive toward the
 
          media sponsors.
 
INTRODUCTION
        The heart of American journalism, and the source of its First Amendment
 
          protection, is its role in democratic processes, particularly in
politics,
 
          campaigns and elections.  The dominant social responsibility theory of
the
 
          press holds that news media enjoy freedom and some privilege in the
United
 
          States so that they can carry out essential positive functions in our
 
       society.  Preeminent among those functions is facilitating the political
 
          system by providing information, ideas and discussion about issues and
 
        candidates for public office (Siebert, Peterson and Schramm 1963).
        The actual relationship between the news media and the public, however,
 
          falls short of that ideal.  Contrary to the ideal of the
knowledgeable,
 
         interested, involved and active citizen, the electorate has been
 
  characterized as largely apathetic and ignorant about public affairs.  Most
 people pay close attention to politics and government only during times of
 crisis or when government actions directly and personally affect them.
 
          For example, only a slight majority (average 56 percent) can identify
any
 
          congressional candidate in their district during campaigns (Neuman
1986, p.
 8-29).
        Most citizens are not actively studying public affairs, attending
 
    meetings, helping candidates or otherwise participating in public affairs.
 "A more realistic model of the typical citizen acknowledges that most
 
        political learning is fragmentary, haphazard and incidental.  The
citizens
 
          does not 'study' the candidates but rather picks up bits and pieces of
 
        information over time, gradually accumulating a composite picture of the
 
          prominent issues and candidates.  This is a process of low-salience
 
     learning.  The key distinction is between information seeking and
 
   information acceptance" (Neuman 1986, p. 148).
        For their part of the relationship, the news media do not seem to be
 
       engaging their audiences in public affairs.  McGuire (1986) points out
that
 many published studies do not report significant media effects, and those
 
          that do account for no more than 2-3% of variance in the effects
measures.
 Neuman (1986, p. 156) says the power of the media has been "exaggerated,"
 
          not only because of the uninterested public but also because of
competition
 from entertainment media and inherent constraints and limitations of the
 
          media to inform and persuade.  He particularly points to the
shallowness of
 much journalism, e.g., horse-race campaign coverage (p. 136).
 
IS PUBLIC JOURNALISM A SOLUTION?
        This gridlock among the citizenry, the news media and the public sphere
 
          has given rise to the notion of public journalism, a broad concept
that
 
         generally seeks to pull the uninterested public into their public
affairs.
 As defined by Rosen (1994):
Public journalism is not a settled doctrine or a strict code of
 
        conduct but an unfolding philosophy about the place of the journalist
 
            in public life.  This philosophy has emerged most clearly in recent
 
            initiatives in the newspaper world that show journalists trying to
 
           connect with their communities in a different way, often by
 
    encouraging civic participation or regrounding the coverage of
 
       politics in the imperatives of public discussion and debate.
        In effect, public journalism would add the duty of public involvement to
 
          the traditional responsibilities of the press, e.g., surveillance,
 
    agenda-setting, watchdog.  The philosophy as applied would have a news
 
        medium purposefully organize its resources and activities to educate and
 
          interest people in the public sphere.
        Such planned, focused initiatives are seen as necessary because one of the
 reasons journalism has failed to teach citizens about public affairs may
 
          be the news media's "lack of purposefulness" (McQuail 1987. p. 292).
That
 
          is, very diverse content is selected and presented serendipitously in
 
       response to a perceived public interest in general news about their
world.
 News itself is fragmentary, incomplete and episodic (Carey 1986), making
 
          it difficult to keep up and comprehend.  Robinson and Levy (1986, p.
15)
 
          give some blame to "the way news media tell the story, particularly
when so
 few news stories take into account the public's limited skills and
 
     interests in processing news content."  While some people, notably those
 
          with low cognitive skills, may learn better from television and
magazines,
 
          the structure and style of newspapers make it more difficult for
average
 
          people to learn about political issues (Neuman, Just and Crigler 1992,
p.
 
          106).  News could be truly comprehensible, Kosicki and McLeod (1990,
p. 72)
 say, but it would require an idealized citizen to view it over time and
 
          across media, an impossibility in real life.
        The public journalism approach to comprehensibility might be to reach
 
        people through various and perhaps innovative techniques (such as
town-hall
 meetings and interactive features) and show them how public affairs affect
 them and how they can have an impact in public affairs.  The key may be
 
          ensuring that the project is concentrated, in deference to the voter's
 
        attention span, and concerted, among media.
 
H1:  A concentrated, concerted multimedia information and news
 
       campaign will increase public awareness of a "public journalism"
 
         program, although awareness will vary by demographics and degree of
 
            exposure to the participating media.
 
        Overall, people seem to learn, that is, retain, very little directly from
 
          the news media, particularly specific information from news stories.
 
       Television-news viewers cannot recall much of newscasts they have seen
 
        before (Neuman 1976; Robinson and Levy 1986, p. 87-105).  Taking out
other
 
          factors, particularly education, the same seems to be true of the
print
 
         media.  Neuman (1986, p. 137) cites an "inverse law:"  Generally, "the
 
        higher the level of abstract, issue-oriented, political content, the
 
      smaller the audience it is likely to attract."
        On the other hand, people are receptive to information that helps them
 
         gain personal power in dealing with public issues.  Neuman, Just and
 
      Crigler (1992, p. 111) found that their subjects were particularly
 
    enthusiastic about media content that told them what they could do about
 
          something.  This is consistent with the findings of a national series
of
 
          focus groups which concluded that citizens are not so much apathetic
as
 
         they are alienated because they feel personally powerless in politics
and
 
          public affairs (Harwood Group, 1991).  That study concluded that
Americans
 
          have a "reservoir of civic duty" (p. 62) and want to be involved, and
it
 
          called for "somehow" reconnecting people and politics.  A central goal
of
 
          public journalism is to address issues and candidates in a powerful,
 
      focused way that shows people how they can make a difference.
 
H2:  A concentrated, concerted public-journalism project will increase
 people's stated interest in an election, feeling encouraged to vote
 
            and confidence in being informed.
 
H3:  A concentrated, concerted public-journalism effort can provide
 
            citizens with specific information and tools to participate in the
 
           democratic process.
 
H4:  Demographic variables will explain more general political
 
       knowledge, like candidates' names, highly publicized campaign events
 
            and other very salient information widely available through many
news
 
            and advertising media.  A concentrated, concerted public-journalism
 
            campaign can increase knowledge of less widely available, less
salient
 campaign information.
 
        Public journalism is rooted in journalists' concerns about disconnections,
 not only between citizens and their government but also between people and
 their news media, particularly newspapers.  Public journalism is
 
   self-interested in that it seeks to make the participating media more
 
       valuable to consumers by connecting them to their community.
 
H5:  A concentrated, concerted public-journalism project will increase
 the public image of the project's media sponsors as contributing to
 
            the democratic process.
 
        The role of political advertising in influencing both attitudes about
 
        government and politics, particularly cynicism, and in influencing
 
    knowledge levels has been argued for years.  Since the 1988 presidential
 
          race, when negative political ads became extremely salient and were
even
 
          argued to have a high impact on voting outcomes, the role of attack
and
 
         positive political ads has become the focus of many studies.  Recent
 
      research, however, has pointed clearly toward the notion that attack ads
 
          have three consistent effects.  First, they are more likely to be
noticed
 
          and remembered than positive ads.  Second, they are more likely to
increase
 knowledge levels than positive ads.  And third, they are more likely to
 
          create negative feelings toward politics, government and candidates.
We
 
          look at each of these effects in more detail.
        Studies consistently support the idea that negative ads are very
 
   memorable.  For example, Faber and Storey (1984) reported that
          approximately 20% of all information recalled from ads in a Texas
 
   gubernatorial election was negative.  Garramone (1984) similarly reported
 
          that 75% of phone respondents in Michigan reported seeing negative ads
for
 
          congressional candidates.  More recently, Lemert et al (1991) reported
that
 in the 1988 presidential election, attack ads were on average better
 
       remembered (55%) than positive ads (45%).
        Other evidence indicates that people do learn from political advertising,
 although the research is mixed.  Patterson (1980), Patterson and McClure
 
          (1976) and Zhao and Chaffee (1993) presented evidence that television
 
       political advertising was positively related to knowledge about
candidates'
 issue positions.  Chaffee, Zhao and Leshner (1994), however, did not show
 
          significant effects.  In addition, although negative ads are generally
 
        better free-recalled than positive ads, it is not clear whether they are
 
          more associated with political knowledge than positive ads.
        Finally, there is evidence that attack ads are significantly related to
 
          more negative thoughts about campaigns, candidates and government
(Lemert,
 
          1992; Hill, 1989; Garramone, 1984).  Some significant evidence says
 
     exposure to negative ads is associated with a lowered likelihood of voting
 
          (Tinkham and Weaver-Lariscy, 1993; Lemert et al, 1991; Faber, Tims and
 
        Schmitt, 1993).
 
H6:  Exposure to greater numbers of negative ads will increase
 
       knowledge.
 
H7:  Exposure to greater numbers of negative ads will increase
 
       cynicism; exposure to greater number of positive ads will decrease
 
           cynicism.
 
        In addition, one might speculate that a public-journalism campaign can
 
         also trigger cynicism, because  teaching people about political
trickery
 
          and other manipulations could cause them to distrust everything about
 
       politics.  This suggests one research hypothesis:
 
RH1:  Cynicism will be increased by awareness of the public-journalism
 program and exposure to the participating media.
 
        Because we were actively involved in providing people with news and
 
      information especially designed to help them understand and participate in
 
          the political process, we were interested in whether people would, if
they
 
          did become better informed and more involved, be able to articulate
that
 
          experience.  The area of psychology that provides relevant measures
for
 
         examining such self-reflective cognitions is called metacognition,
"meta"
 
          in the sense that people are thinking about their own thinking.  In an
exc
 
          ellent review of metacognitive processes, Yussen (1985) points out
that
 
         what people "know" about their own "knowledge" can often predict
knowledge
 
          levels.  In the present study, we asked people two kinds of
metacognitive
 
          questions.  First, we asked them whether they believed they had enough
 
        information to make an informed voting choice.  Second, we asked them
 
       whether they believed news stories of various types were "easy to
 
   understand" or "difficult to understand."
 
H8:  Metaknowledge that news stories are understandable and that one
 
            has enough information to make an informed voting choice will be
 
         positively related to measures of knowledge.
 
STUDY DESIGN and METHOD
        This field experiment sought to involve citizens in the political process
 
          by a planned, coordinated information and news campaign across three
media
 
          and four media outlets.  As part of a public-journalism effort, the
project
 attempted to deal with key points raised above by structuring media
 
      reports to be comprehensible, by coordinating different media, by
directing
 media content and by providing information specifically to empower
 
     citizens.
        Typically, media-effects research is performed in a laboratory or by post
 
          hoc audience measurement of routine, uncoordinated media coverage.
For
 
         example, media knowledge effects usually are measured by selecting a
few
 
          apparently important items that have appeared in the news, then
 
 demonstrating how few survey respondents are familiar with the information
 
          (Neuman, Just and Crigler 1992, p. 2).
        For this project, the participating media were involved from the
 
   conception and cooperated throughout.  They were the morning and Sunday
 
         newspaper in the state capital, the statewide public-television and
 
     public-radio networks and a local commercial TV station, dominant in the
 
          market.  Editors and news directors agreed in advance to coordinate
 
     extraordinary treatment of two statewide election campaigns, as part of
 
         their public-journalism partnership to improve democratic
participation.
 
          Most of these partners had been working together for more than two
years,
 
          beginning with town-hall meetings and a presidential-campaign debate
in
 
         1992 and continuing through a series of projects, ranging from
health-care
 
          reform and the federal budget deficit to statewide issues and
elections.
 
          In the fall of 1994, the partners, working with the researchers,
targeted
 
          the gubernatorial and U.S. senatorial campaigns for an intense
          public-journalism initiative.  The project was particularly difficult
 
       because both campaigns were lackluster, with the incumbents heavily
favored
 to win (as they did).
        In addition to their traditional campaign coverage, the four media
 
     partners agreed to cooperate on, and coordinate presentation of, an intense
 effort that began in late September and concluded on Sunday, Nov. 6,
 
       before the Tuesday election.  The project had two parallel tracks:
        TOWN HALLS AND DEBATES.  Continuing an effort that had begun in the 1992
 
          presidential primaries, the partners sought to pull ordinary citizens
into
 
          issue identification and discussion and have them question the
candidates
 
          at debates.  In the gubernatorial campaign, the project held well
attended
 
          town-hall meetings in three cities around the state, then a debate
with
 
         questions from the town-hall participants.  The Friday night debate was
 
         simulcast live on public TV and public radio, followed by a listener c
 
       all-in discussion program on public radio.  In addition, the debate was
 
         taped; public TV broadcast the tape twice the following Sunday, and the
 
         commercial station broadcast it once that day.  The newspaper made the
 
        debate the centerpiece of its Saturday front page.  Later, transcripts
were
 made available through the newspaper, and approximately 200 were
 
   disseminated by request.  Especially with such intense exposure, the debate
 generated substantial news coverage and interest in the community because
 
          a citizen wearing an American-flag shirt successfully demanded from
the
 
         candidates specific commitments on a particularly salient issue.
        The Senate discussion was less elaborate.  One town-hall meeting was held
 
          just before a scheduled debate.  The incumbent declined to take part,
so
 
          the town-hall participants questioned the challenger on live,
statewide
 
         public television.  The rest of the hour-long program was devoted to
 
      discussion of media coverage and campaign practices, with experts
answering
 questions from the citizens in the studio and from statewide call-ins.
 
          This program also was taped and rebroadcast on public and commercial
TV.  I
 
          t drew some news coverage, though not as much as the gubernatorial
 
    campaign.
        CIVICS TRAINING.  Because of the alienation/empowerment issue, the other
 
          track of this project was to provide to readers, viewers and listeners
 
        specific information about political tactics to allow them to gain some
 
         feeling of control over the campaign activities swirling around them.
The
 
          newspaper researched and presented a series, called "Armed and
Dangerous,"
 
          that sought to educate readers about how candidates and their keepers
try
 
          to manipulate debates and how political advertisements are used to
create
 
          attitudes and beliefs.  One part of the series pointed out that many
 
      candidates promise to solve problems beyond the powers of the office and
 
          taught readers exactly "what politicians can and can't do for you."
The
 
          last part, explaining the reasons for and implications of negative
 
    campaigning and helping readers cut through it, was published the Sunday
 
          before the Tuesday election.  The packages featured a "voter's bill of
 
        rights" so citizens would understand what they deserve out of candidates
 
          and campaigns.  The helpful, advice parts of the series were reprinted
in
 
          later newspapers, particularly on the editorial page.  Because this
sort of
 detailed information and help is more suited to print than electronic
 
        media, the radio and TV partners were less involved here.  However, some
of
 the "Armed and Dangerous" information was worked into their programs:  On
 
          the Friday night before the election. statewide public TV had a
segment on
 
          negative campaigning, and the newspaper package that Sunday promoted
two
 
          related programs that day on the commercial TV station.  Statewide
public
 
          radio devoted a popular call-in program to the subject.  Just before
the
 
          election, the public-journalism project compiled much of the
newspaper's
 
          campaign coverage and Armed and Dangerous material into a booklet
named
 
         "Voter's Self Defense Manual."  Approximately 300 copies were made
 
    available to the public and quickly claimed.
        Throughout all these experimental treatments in all the media, the name
 
          and logo of the public-journalism project were used repeatedly and
 
    prominently.
        The day after the election, interviewers used random-digit dialing to
 
        select and interview 657 adult residents of the county in which the
media
 
          partners are located.  Interviews were completed within five days.
        The 44-item questionnaire measured respondents' knowledge of the
 
   candidates, issues and campaign activities; the nature of the candidates'
 
          ads; the respondents' voting behavior and choices; their media use;
 
     familiarity with, reaction to and attitude toward the public-journalism
 
         project; respondents' sources of political information; attitudes
toward
 
          the campaigns; self-perceptions of political efficacy and cynicism.
 
      Independent and dependent variables used in the study are defined in the
 
          appendix.
 
RESULTS
        The public-journalism program had been active and visible in the community
 for more than two years, so it was to be expected that public awareness
 
          would be high.  In fact, most respondents had heard of the program,
54% of
 
          males and 49% of females.  The highest awareness, 60%, was among
 
  middle-income ($30,000-$50,000).  Whites were more familiar with the
 
      project (52%) than minorities (39% for all minorities, 46% for blacks),
 
         though there were few minorities in the sample of this largely
homogenous
 
          county.  Among higher-educated respondents, 55% were aware, compared
to 38%
 of those whose education did not go beyond high school.  The biggest
 
       group, 56%, said they heard of the program through the newspapers, 50%
 
        cited public TV, 49% the network affiliate and 30% public radio (though
 
         those numbers should be tempered by the fact that 20% credited another,
 
         non-participating newspaper and 36% another, non-participating TV
station,
 
          indicating confusion or invention).
        Hierarchical regression analysis allowed further exploration of awareness.
  Education and whether one actually voted were modest predictors of
 
      awareness of the public-journalism program ("Heard of WTP-W" in Table 1),
 
          and there was a stronger positive relationship between readership of
the
 
          newspaper or viewership of public television and the awareness
variable.
 
          H1 is supported.
        Descriptive statistics (Table 2) indicate support for H2.  Of the
 
    respondents familiar with the public-journalism program, 32%
          straightforwardly agreed that it encouraged their interest in the
election,
 55% said it informed them about important issues, and 11% said the program
 encouraged them to vote.
        H3 proposed that the "Armed and Dangerous" series provided citizens with
 
          specific information and tools to participate in the political
process.
 
          Table 1 shows that income, employment and voting were significant
 
   predictors of the variable "Armed and Dangerous" (see Appendix for
 
    definition), accounting for 5% of the variance.  But after those variables
 
          in the regression hierarchy, awareness of the public-journalism
program was
 a strong predictor of the "Armed and Dangerous" knowledge, adding another
 
          2% of variance and supporting H3.
        Hypothesis 4 suggested that demographic variables would become less
 
      dominant in accounting for the variance in dependent variables that were
 
          clearly measures of specific material presented in the
public-journalism
 
          project.  This hypothesis found at least partial support.  There were
two
 
          measures of such specific material: whether people had heard of the
project
 (identified as WTP-W in Table 1) and knowledge of the Armed and Dangerous
 
          coverage.  As can be seen in Table 1, demographics as a block
explained 1%
 
          of the variance in WTP-W and 5% of the variance in Armed and
Dangerous.
 
          Consistent with the hypothesis, media consumption (newspaper and
public TV)
 accounted for an additional 5% of the variance of WTP-W and 2% of the
 
        additional variance in Armed and Dangerous knowledge.  As noted above,
 
        having heard of the public-journalism program was strongly associated
with
 
          Armed and Dangerous knowledge.  The bottom line, then, is that after
 
      demographics are accounted for, media variables are significant in
 
    accounting for knowledge of specific media content, here a
          public-journalism project.
        That distinction becomes clearer when examining two other dependent
 
      measures, knowing candidates' names and episodic knowledge (see appendix),
 
          both of which were information widely available from many different
 
     sources.  Their variance was largely accounted for by demographics.
 
      Newspaper and TV consumption contributed nothing to this variance.
(Having
 heard of WTP-W and having encountered more negative ads did explain
 
      another 2% of the variance in episodic knowledge, and having seen more
 
        positive ads accounted for an additional 2% of the variance in knowing
 
        candidates' names.)
        Interestingly, then, exposure to newspaper and public TV is highly
 
     predictive of knowledge of specific, known media content, but for material
 
          that is more broadly available, demographics account for most of the
 
      variance.
        Hypothesis 4 also suggested that knowledge items that tested material
 
        known to have been widely and frequently available in both news and
 
     advertising (defined as salient in the appendix) would be predicted
 
     primarily by demographic variables and by advertising exposure.  This
 
       hypothesis was clearly supported.  As can be seen in Table 1, 4% of the
 
         variance in salient knowledge items was explained by demographics, none
by
 
          news consumption and 1% by the number of negative ads seen.
          H4 proposed that knowledge of material known to have been less widely
 
          available, primarily in the public-journalism effort, and not in
 
  advertising, (identified as nonsalient in Table 1) would be more predicted
 
          by consumption of the participating media.  This hypothesis was
supported
 
          (Table 1).  Twelve percent of the variance in nonsalient knowledge was
 
        accounted for by demographics, an addition 3% by the participating media
 
          and 2% more for having heard of the public-journalism project.
        Journalists concerned about the acceptance, credibility and future of
 
        their media are the basis for H5, whether the public-journalism effort
to
 
          reconnect people with political processes would make respondents feel
more
 
          positive toward the sponsoring news organizations.  This hypothesis
found
 
          strong support, as 42% of those who had heard of WTP-W felt more
positive
 
          toward the sponsors (Table 2).
        The next two hypotheses proposed both positive and negative effects of
 
         advertising.  H6 found support, as exposure to more negative ads was
 
      significantly predictive of the widely available episodic and salient
 
       knowledge, adding 1% of the variance to each (Table 1).  Interestingly,
 
         negative-ad exposure was not related to knowledge of the Armed and
 
    Dangerous and nonsalient material that primarily was in the
          public-journalism project.
        H7 predicted that the more negative ads an individual encountered, the
 
         greater their cynicism level, and the more positive ads encountered,
the
 
          lower the cynicism level.  Table 1 shows this was the case, even after
all
 
          demographic and news variables' effects were removed.  Together,
exposure
 
          to negative and positive ads accounted for 5% of the variance in
cynicism.
 Neither demographics nor news consumption was significant in that
 
    equation.
        This result provides feedback on research hypothesis 1, that exposure to
 
          the project's information and explanation of manipulative political
 
     activities actually might
increase cynicism.  RH1 fell, as there was no measurable increase in
 
      cynicism as a result of the public-journalism effort (Table 1).
        The final hypothesis, H8, proposed that metaknowledge (here, one's
 
     estimate of one's own difficulty in understanding news of various types and
 feeling that one knew enough to make an informed voting decision) would be
 important in explaining all types of knowledge.  Table 1 shows that
 
      difficulty of understanding was significantly related to having heard of
 
          WTP-W and knowing the names of the candidates.  If people felt they
knew
 
          enough to make an informed decision, they were more likely to have
heard of
 WTP-W and knew more episodic and salient information. Inexplicably, they
 
          also remembered fewer candidates' names.  Thus, the hypothesis that
 
     metaknowledge is predictive of citizen knowledge is partially supported.
 
DISCUSSION
        This research apparently is the first measurement of whether a planned,
 
          coordinated, focused multimedia public-journalism effort can affect
the
 
         citizenry's knowledge and attitudes.  The results are very encouraging
to
 
          those who want to improve the democratic processes and to those who
believe
 the news media can take a more active role in facilitating those
 
   processes.  Our results indicate that the public recognizes this
 
  contribution to their democracy and appreciates it.
        At the same time, we believe this project makes important contributions to
 news-media research.  Unlike laboratory experiments and post hoc audience
 
          measurements, this field experiment involved collaboration with, and
 
      responsible orchestration of, four leading news organizations across three
 
          media as an experimental treatment.  The focused treatment and
measurement
 
          occurred within a tight and controlled time frame, during and after
the
 
         political campaign.  We think this unique experimental design greatly
 
       increases the external, as well as internal, validity of this project.
        We found that the public-journalism effort achieved widespread public
 
        awareness, and most important, the people who knew of the project said
 
        that, as a result, they were more interested in and knowledgeable about
the
 election and more encouraged to vote.  More specifically, the
          public-journalism project succeeded in providing some citizens with
 
     specific information and tools to become more "armed and dangerous" in
 
        dealing with political campaigns.
        While demographic differences account for knowledge of political
 
   information that is widely available, the newspaper and public TV succeeded
 in communicating specific, known media content.  Negative advertising does
 have an effect, apparently enhancing general knowledge of the candidates
 
          and campaigns, but it did not predict knowledge of the material in the
 
        public-journalism effort.  Negative political ads do seem to increase
 
       cynicism, and positive ads have the opposite relationship.  The
 
 public-journalism effort to uncover political manipulations and shenanigans
 does not appear to feed cynicism.
        As news organizations across the country experiment more with public
 
       journalism, using their considerable resources to motivate a reluctant
 
        citizenry to become involved in a sclerotic polity, there is much more
to
 
          be learned.  If journalists and researchers can continue to
collaborate as
 
          we have here, methodological improvements can sharpen experimental
 
    treatments and measurements and, therefore, knowledge.  A longitudinal
 
        experiment would show how learning and attitudes change as a result of
 
        public journalism.  Negative campaigning was controversial in the 1994
 
        elections, and our results only begin to give insights into its effects
on
 
          the citizenry and political processes.  Cynicism appears to be a
complex
 
          phenomenon that, given the low level of involvement in public affairs,
 
        demands further research.
 
REFERENCES
 
Carey, James (1986).  The Dark Continent of American Journalism.  In R.K. Manoff
and
 
         Michael Schudson (eds.), Reading the News.  New York: Pantheon.
 
Faber, Ron, and Storey, M.C. (1984).  Recall of Information from Political
Advertising.
 
            Journal of Advertising, 13 (3), 39-44.
 
Faber, R.J., A.R. Tims and K.G. Schmitt (1993).  Negative Political Advertising
and Voting
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of
 
      Advertising, 22 (4), 67-76.
 
Garramone, Gina (1984).  Voter Response to Negative Political Ads.  Journalism
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Gollin, Albert E., and Nicolas Bloom (1985).  Newspapers in American News
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           York: Newspaper Advertising Bureau.
 
Harwood Group (1991).  Citizens and Politics: A View from Main Street America.
A report
 
            for the Kettering Foundation, Dayton, Ohio.
 
Hill, Ronald (1989).  An Exploration of Voter Responses to Political
Advertisement.
 
         Journal of Advertising, 18 (4), 14-22.
 
Kosicki, Gerald M., and Jack M. McLeod (1990).  Learning from Political News:
Effects of
 
            Media Images and Information-Processing Strategies.  In Sidney Kraus
(ed.), Mass
 
        Communication and Political Information Processing.  Hillsdale, NJ:
Lawrence Erlbaum
 
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Lemert, James B. et al (1991).  News Verdicts, the Debates and Presidential
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            New York: Praeger.
 
McGuire, W.J. (1986).  The Myth of Massive Media Impact: Savagings and
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            Comstock (ed.), Public Communication and Behavior, Vol. 1.  New
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Neuman, W. Russell, Marion R. Just and Ann N. Crigler (1992).  Common Knowledge:
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Patterson, T.E., and R.D. McClure (1976). The Unseeing Eye.  New York: Putnam.
 
Robinson, John P., and Mark R. Levy (1986).  The Main Source: Learning from
Television
 
           News.  Beverly Hills: Sage.
 
Rosen, Jay (1994).  Public Journalism: First Principles.  In Jay Rosen and Davis
Merritt
 
            Jr., Public Journalism: Theory and Practice.  Dayton, Ohio:
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Siebert, Fred S., Theodore Peterson and Wilbur Schramm (1963).  Four Theories of
the Press
 
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Tinkham, S.F., and R.A. Weaver-Lariscy (1993).  A Diagnostic Approach to
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           Impact of Negative Political Television Commercials.  Journal of
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         Electronic Media, Fall, 376-399.
 
Yussen, Steven R. (1985).  The Role of Metacognition in Contemporary Theories of
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    Metacognition, Cognition and Human Performance, Vol. 1, pp. 253-283.
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Zhao, X., and S. Chaffee (1993).  Campaign Advertisements and Television News as
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            of Political Issue Information.  Unpublished manuscript, School of
Journalism, University
 
            of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

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