How does Ten Years of Democracy in South Africa effective produce an informative speech?
Answers
Answer:
The Washington Post/Kaiser Family Foundation/Harvard University Survey Project is a three-way partnership and an experiment
in combining survey research and reporting to better inform the public. The Post, Kaiser, and Harvard jointly design and analyze
surveys examining public knowledge, perceptions, and misperceptions on major issues. The Post then reports the results as well
as facts to dispel myths and misperceptions.
The current Survey of South Africans at Ten Years of Democracy is a nationally representative survey of South African citizens
ages 18 years and older. Face-to-face interviews were conducted in nine of South Africa’s eleven official languages between
September 29 and November 7, 2003. The survey sample was designed as a probability based, nationally representative sample,
stratified by province, race, age, and urban/rural divisions using data from the 2001 Census of South Africa. Sampling was done
in three stages: the first stage was a random selection of enumeration areas (EAs) in the country; the second stage was a random
selection of dwelling units/stands within the EA; and the third stage was a random selection of an eligible respondent within the
dwelling. The final sample included 2,961 South Africans, including 1,715 Black South Africans, 612 Whites, 364 Coloureds, and
265 Indians. All results have been weighted to be representative of the South African population by province, geographic area
type, age, race, and gender.
The margin of sampling error for total respondents is +/-3 percentage points. For Black respondents it is +/-4 percentage points,
for Whites it is +/-9 percentage points, for Coloureds it is +/-9 percentage points, and for Indians it is +/-8 percentage points. For
responses based on subgroups, the margin of sampling error is higher. Sampling error is only one of many potential sources of
error in this or any other public opinion poll.
Representatives of The Washington Post, The Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation, and Harvard University worked together to
develop the survey questionnaire and analyze the results. Each organization bears the sole responsibility for the work that appears
under its name. The project team included Richard Morin, The Washington Post director of polling; Drew E. Altman, president of
the Kaiser Family Foundation, Mollyann Brodie, vice president and director of public opinion and media research, and Elizabeth
Hamel, senior research associate; and Robert J. Blendon, professor of health policy and political analysis at the John F. Kennedy
School of Government and the Harvard School of Public Health, and John M. Benson, managing director of the Harvard Opinion
Research Program in the Harvard School of Public Health. Fieldwork for this survey was conducted by Development Research
Africa (DRA) of Durban, South Africa. Dr. David Stoker of Statistics South Africa served as a consultant on this project in
drawing the sample and weighting the data.
Answer:
sorry i dont know
and i'll not tell you