Covering the Great RecessionMethodology
Covering the Great Recession was conducted in three parts. The first was made up of coding from PEJ’s weekly News Coverage Index (NCI). That sample analyzed data from February 1 through August 31, 2009 and is referred to here as the broad sample. It consists of all news stories including those that were about subjects unrelated to the economy. The complete methodology of the News Coverage Index is available here. The second part of the study includes a closer examination of a sub-section of economic-related stories as they were originally coded in the NCI. This sample covers the time period of February 1 through July 3, 2009 and is referred to here as the economy-focused sample. Details of that process are below. The third element, an examination of the precise phrases and ideas that resonated most fully in the media was conducted in collaboration with researchers at Cornell University and Stanford University. This third element included an even larger universe of media – more than a million different web-based outlets each day, including RSS feeds from mainstream news sites, new media sites and blogs. The analysis conducted here covers the time period of February 1 through July 3, 2009. More details on their methodology are found in the text box within the main narrative and also on their website, http://memetracker.org. Sample Design
Broad Sample These outlets, along with the methods of rotation, are as follows:
Newspapers (Sun-Fri) Coded two out of these four every weekday and Sunday Coded two out of these four every weekday and Sunday Coded 2 out of these 4 every weekday and Sunday
Web sites (Coded 6 of 12 each day, Mon-Fri)
Morning Network TV (Mon-Fri)
Evening Network TV (Mon-Fri)
Cable TV (Fifteen in all, Mon-Fri)
Nighttime CNN – coded 2 out of the 4 every day
Nighttime Fox News – coded 2 out of the 4 every day
Nighttime MSNBC – coded 2 out of the 4 every day News Radio (Mon-Fri) Talk Radio (Mon-Fri)
1 out of 2 additional conservatives each day
1 out of 2 liberals each day
Story Inclusion
Economy-focused Sample
Economic crisis To arrive at the economy-focused sample, stories from talk radio and all broadcast stories that were 20 seconds or less were excluded from the sample. Then, every 4th story was selected randomly from each of the outlets. The resulting economy-focused sample consisted of 1,656 stories. Capture and RetrievalAll outlets are captured and included in PEJ’s media archive. For newspapers that are available in print in the Washington, D.C. area, hard copies are used. For newspapers that are not available for delivery, digital editions of the paper are retrieved either through the newspaper’s own Web site, or through the use of digital delivery services such as pressdisplay.com and newsstand.com. When necessary, the text of articles are supplemented by the archives available in the LexisNexis computer database. Radio programs are captured through online streams of the shows. Using automated software, we record several local affiliates that air the program in various markets throughout the country. The purpose of this method is to ensure that we have a version of the program in case one of the streams is unavailable on a particular day, and so that we record the show in a manner that represents the way a typical listener would hear the program with commercials and newsbreaks.
Online websites are captured manually by a member of PEJ’s staff. The capture time is rotated daily between 9-10 am ET and 4-5 pm ET. The home pages and pages with the top articles for all sites are saved so that when we reference the material, the format is the same as it appeared online at the time of capture. All television and radio programs are then coded by a member of PEJ’s staff who watches or listens to the archived version of the program.
Coding Team & Process for Weekly Index Coding
Additional Coding of Economy-focused stories
Coding Team & Process for the Additional Coding In addition to the main intercoder testing conducted on all NCI variables, supplemental testing was conducted on the additional variables used in this portion of the study. 30 randomly selected stories were coded by all members of the coding team. The percent agreement for each variable was as follows:
Dateline: 95%
Covering the Great Recession |
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