Partisan divides over K-12 education in 8 charts
The public is sharply divided along partisan lines on topics ranging from what should be taught in schools to how much influence parents should have over the curriculum.
Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
The public is sharply divided along partisan lines on topics ranging from what should be taught in schools to how much influence parents should have over the curriculum.
Here’s a closer look at what recent surveys have found about Americans’ views of affirmative action.
What does the 2020 electorate look like politically, demographically and religiously as the race enters its final days?
Six-in-ten U.S. adults say gun violence is a very big problem in the country today, up 9 percentage points from spring 2022.
Veterans and non-veterans in the United States largely align when it comes to the decision to pull all troops out of Afghanistan.
Black and Hispanic adults are more likely than whites to say they feel a need to change the way they talk around people of other races and ethnicities.
Many single-and-looking people wouldn’t want to date someone who voted for the opposing party’s candidate in the 2016 presidential election.
At least 20 nations preceded the U.S. in granting women the right to vote, according to an analysis of measures in 198 countries and territories.
Nearly seven-in-ten registered voters say postponing state primary elections has been a necessary step to address the coronavirus outbreak.
The public sees health risks to students and teachers as the top factor to be given a lot of consideration as schools decide whether to reopen.
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