Among middle and high school students who were never users of the specific tobacco product, 39.1% were curious about using e-cigarettes, 37.0% were curious about smoking cigarettes, 28.0% were curious about smoking cigars, 23.2% were curious about smoking hookahs, and 15.9% were curious about using smokeless tobacco products (Table 8). Among never users of the specific tobacco product, 45.9% reported susceptibility to cigarettes, followed by e-cigarettes (45.0%), cigars (35.9%), hookahs (29.9%), and smokeless tobacco products (21.2%). Susceptibility to using e-cigarettes was 46.9% among females and 43.4% among males. Susceptibility to using e-cigarettes and smoking cigarettes was higher among middle school students (47.0% and 49.5%, respectively) than among high school students (42.8% and 42.7%, respectively).
Years of research on survey methods shows that people tend to answer some questions differently when they are responding to a live interviewer on a telephone than when they are providing written answers in privacy, either online or on paper. Social scientists believe the differences are caused by a variety of factors, often including an unconscious tendency to give socially desirable answers when talking to another person.
The survey estimates that roughly 8 million U.S. adults were raised Jewish or had a Jewish parent. Six-in-ten were raised Jewish by religion (58%), while 7% were raised as Jews of no religion; another 35% had at least one Jewish parent but say they were not raised exclusively Jewish (if at all), either by religion or aside from religion.14Overall, 68% of those who say they were raised Jewish or who had at least one Jewish parent now identify as Jewish, including 49% who are now Jewish by religion and 19% who are now Jews of no religion. That means that one-third of those raised Jewish or by Jewish parent(s) are not Jewish today, either because they identify with a religion other than Judaism (including 19% who consider themselves Christian) or because they do not currently identify as Jewish either by religion or aside from religion.
I am using contact list trigger to pass data from one survey (survey 1) to another (survey 2). In survey 1, I have ACCEPT/REJECT and that works fine. I also have a qualitative data field where participants have to write answers in details. When they write one or two words it pass correctly from survey 1 to 2 but when they write long passages it does not work. It stops at the end of survey 1 and does not trigger survey 2.
Like many past presidential primary challengers, Phillips has targeted New Hampshire to make a splash. And he could notch a symbolic win there because Biden won't be on the ballot due to the Democratic National Committee's impending sanctions against Granite State Democrats for violating the party's primary calendar rules. The congressman's campaign is motivated by concerns over Biden's electability given Democrats' apprehensions about the president's advanced age (he'll be 81 in November), poor approval rating (40 percent in 538's national average) and early general election polls that may foreshadow a difficult race against Trump.
A summary of a recent Gallup poll from The Economist posits that low levels of engagement at the workplace (not just for developers but all workers) is measurable, and explains why workers are generally more interested in doing only what is necessary and not taking on opportunities to learn.
While your poll is collecting insights from your network, you can easily keep an eye on the activity in real-time, such as how many votes have been cast thus far, results for each option, and how much time is left for voting. Only you, the poll creator, can also see who voted and what they cast their vote for.
That's according to a recent survey of 2,000 Americans conducted by market research company OnePoll and commissioned by sleep research site Sleepopolis. The report, which was recently highlighted on the TODAY show, found that people who make their beds tend to be adventurous, confident, sociable and high-maintenance. Meanwhile, people who don't make their beds tend to be shy, moody, curious and sarcastic.
"If you make your bed every morning, you will have accomplished the first task of the day,'' he said. "It will give you a small sense of pride, and it will encourage you to do another task, and another, and another. And by the end of the day that one task completed will have turned into many tasks completed."
Election officials look for polling locations that are ADA (Americans with Disabilities Act) accessible, centrally located and easy to find. It goes without saying, there must be plenty of parking and space inside for voting machines.
Polls are a great way of collecting inputs from your audience. Whether you're organizing a (remote) company meeting, a conference, or teaching a class, you can use them to lighten up the mood, test knowledge, or ask for feedback.
You can choose from various types of single polls, run a Quiz, or activate multiple polls at once via Survey.
Quick tip: Character limit in polls
Your poll question can contain up to 256 characters. Another 256 characters are available for the poll description. There's no character limit for open text poll responses from the audience.
Poll the audience with a multiple choice question to learn more about their preferences and opinions. A multiple choice poll is also a quick way to check your audience's understanding of presented content in real-time.
Each option in a multiple choice poll can be up to 256 characters long.
Create a Survey to run multiple polls at the same time, collect feedback, rate multiple items and add an "other" option to a multiple choice poll. For a more detailed tutorial on Surveys, read the Run a Survey via Slido article.
Tip 2: Additional poll options
Go to Settings - Features and expand Live Polls to set the fixed order of multiple choice poll options, to change the format of the poll results, or to hide the vote counter in Present mode.
When creating a poll, you can also add its description under the three-dot menu. Once your poll is ready, click the green play icon to activate it. If you want to activate multiple polls at the same time, create a Survey.
Tip 4: Test your polls
It's always a good practice to test everything before you go live. Activate your poll by clicking the green "play" icon, then navigate to the left-hand-side and click the Participant mode button. Cast a vote and observe how the results change in real-time. Finally, click to Present mode button in the upper right corner and open the link in another tab or in full-screen to check how the results will look for the participants.
To learn more about testing in advance, read our Test your event article.
Tip 5: Reset your poll results
Once you're done with testing, click the three vertical dots next to your poll and select reset results. To reset your polls in bulk, hover on the poll icon until a square appears. Then, select the polls you want to set back to zero and hit the "bin" icon on the top.
Tip 6: Share your polls with participants
Display Present mode on your screen to let participants join via event code. Your audience will be able to use the event code during the dates you set up for your event. Alternatively, you can send out the direct link or a QR code to your event via email or internal platform or collect votes, crowdsource questions, and brainstorm ideas during or even before your event.
There are no specific limits on the number of questions or characters in a survey but there is a limit of 100 polls or 100 000 characters per room overall. Have you added more than that to your survey or your event?
Instead, you could have three separate open-text polls in the survey, then export the results and combine them manually. You could also set up an open-text poll, allow multiple answers and send participants a direct link just to this poll.
Hi @KMCSA,
Quizzes are designed to ask for the participant name for them to join. Whilst I can see it would be a good idea to have this automatically save for the polls, here at Slido we like to enable participants and presenters to set their own preference.
You can do just that by setting up your event to enabling the option to require participants names when they join the event, meaning you could see what decisions were made and who made them.
This is available with our Engage plan and higher. You could always spark a discussion after the polls in the event, alternatively!
Hope this helps!
Best,
You can create a Survey which will allow you to input multiple polls that are all active for your participants to respond to asynchronously. If you have individual Polls you will need to activate each one manually.
As voters exited polling locations across the state on Tuesday, many encountered petitioners gathering signatures for an act to limit contributions to independent political action committees, otherwise known as super PACs.
A new poll shows Sheila Jackson Lee and John Whitmire maintain an overwhelming lead in the Houston mayoral race with less than a month until election day. Data shows other candidates in the crowded field have struggled to make headway among voters.
The Hobby School of Public Affairs at the University of Houston published a poll in July, before campaign season was in full swing, showing Sheila Jackson Lee and John Whitmire with the vast majority of support among voters. A second poll released Tuesday showed, three months later, the pattern still holds. Among the two of them, they hold 65 percent of the vote, with 22 percent of voters still undecided.
Whether you are creating a simple questionnaire or poll, searching for an alternative to Google Forms or Doodle, or working on a sophisticated survey with complex validation rules, conditional logic and quota management, we can provide you with all the tools you need. Here, you can juice that knowledge and quickly achieve your survey goals.
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