And they put trick questions with the agree/disagree pattern reversed... read very carefully... wonder if this is just as much about megans law as it is about how people presume to answer questions contradicting what they would probably have put had they read carefully the way the answers were written.
Unfortunately, it only takes making it to the second page to realize this survey is not very well prepared. Many of the questions are very general and thus any results would almost certainly be misleading.
For instance, when asked if if you agree / disagree that kidnapping an adult is a registrable offense, the answer would be dependent on the state laws you reside under. Which states position is the survey taking in order to quantify an understanding of the registry when many different registries have many different criteria?
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2 comments:
And they put trick questions with the agree/disagree pattern reversed... read very carefully... wonder if this is just as much about megans law as it is about how people presume to answer questions contradicting what they would probably have put had they read carefully the way the answers were written.
Unfortunately, it only takes making it to the second page to realize this survey is not very well prepared. Many of the questions are very general and thus any results would almost certainly be misleading.
For instance, when asked if if you agree / disagree that kidnapping an adult is a registrable offense, the answer would be dependent on the state laws you reside under. Which states position is the survey taking in order to quantify an understanding of the registry when many different registries have many different criteria?
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