Sentences with phrase «black respondents»

In 2016, 48 % of black respondents express support for the idea, down from 65 % in 2015.
The chart below reflects the ratings given to their local public schools by national samples of black respondents over time, compared with national samples of the general population in the same surveys.
The survey data suggest a majority of millennials support charter schools and school voucher programs, particularly for low - income students, with the strongest support coming from black respondents.
One of the reasons polls frequently err in estimating African American religious involvement is that «easy to reach» and «hard to reach» black respondents differ on religion questions from patterns among white respondents.
Among black respondents, 37 % were short sleepers; among whites, 28 %.
About 66 percent of Hispanics with an opinion on the issue indicate support for charter schools, while 68 percent of Black respondents hold the same position.
Mostly notably, the percentage of black respondents who favored such policies dropped from 65 percent last year to 48 percent in 2016.
Take this poll from Pew: In the sample, there were only 146 black respondents.
Around 19 % of Hispanic respondents «say the term «gamer» describes them well» compared with just 11 % of black respondents and 7 % of white respondents.
Americans as a whole (73 %) also overwhelmingly supported the church playing this role, including 77 percent of black respondents and 71 percent of all non-white respondents.
Overall, about 4 out of 10 Americans (38 %), including 43 percent of black respondents and 40 percent of all non-white respondents, strongly or somewhat agreed that churches are part of the problem.
These percentages based on the UAS represent double digit rebounds from the 2017 Education Next Poll, where 54 and 57 percent of Hispanic and Black respondents, respectively, expressed support for charter schooling.
In contrast, according to a Phi Delta Kappan poll 67 percent of black respondents are in opposition to opting out (Richardson, 2016, p. 17).
Neighborly trust also appears tied to race, though not causated: 27 percent of Hispanic respondents trust their neighbors, compared to 31 percent of black respondents and 62 percent of white respondents.
Of Hispanic respondents to a 2016 survey, 70 percent agreed that owning their own home is necessary to live the American Dream, followed by 64 percent of Asian / Pacific Islander respondents and 63 percent of black respondents.
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