FGZ Cohesion Panel: Wave 2 – Questions on climate change, antisemitism, and gender equality (English Version)

General Information:

*Note: The items were tested in German. These are English translations of the original German wordings.

Question Text:

You hear different opinions about Jews here and there. We have compiled some of them here. Would you please tell us to what extent you agree or disagree with these statements?
[Man hört hier und da verschiedene Meinungen über Juden. Wir haben einmal einige davon hier zusammengestellt. Würden Sie uns bitte sagen, inwieweit Sie diesen Aussagen zustimmen oder nicht zustimmen?]

Answer Categories:

Strongly disagree [Stimme überhaupt nicht zu]
Rather disagree [Stimme eher nicht zu]
Neither agree nor disagree [Teils-teils]
Rather agree [Stimme eher zu]
Strongly agree [Stimme voll und ganz zu]
Can't answer [Kann ich nicht beantworten]
Prefer not to answer [Möchte ich nicht beantworten]
In contrast to the previous questions, two non-substantive answer categories were displayed for question 10 in order to give respondents the (explicit) option of leaving the items unanswered. The proportion of respondents who selected the non-substantive response categories "Can't answer" or “Prefer not to answer" was sometimes considerable (see Table 11): For items a and g, their share was about 28 % of responses, and for item h, it was as high as 39 % of responses. Overall, slightly more than half of the subjects (53 %) gave a non-substantive answer for at least one of the items.
In addition, there was no item nonresponse for question 10, that is, all eight items were answered by the 240 subjects. The respondents used the full range of the response scale for all items.

Looking at the substantive response categories ("Strongly disagree" to "Strongly agree"), it can be seen that the frequency distributions of items a to d and item f are right skewed, that is, the (large) majority of respondents did not agree (fully/rather) with these statements. For items e and h, about the same number of subjects expressed agreement as disagreement (item e: 33 % vs. 39 %, item h: 19 % vs. 20 %), while item g had more agreement than disagreement (30 % vs. 19 %).

To determine the internal consistency of the 8-item scale, Cronbach's alpha was calculated. This internal consistency was good (cf. George & Mallery, 2002, p. 231), with Cronbach's alpha = 0.86.

The aim of the pretest was to investigate the reason why the subjects selected the non-substantive categories ("Can't answer," "Prefer not to answer"). In addition, the aim was to analyze whether respondents perceived differences between the extreme (items c and h) and moderate items and whether they considered answering these items in surveys to be appropriate. The corresponding cognitive follow-up questions (N1_F10 to N3_F10, see Appendix) were administered to the 116 subjects who were (randomly) assigned to Group 2. Within this group, four subgroups were randomly formed, each of which was to assess two of the eight items in terms of their appropriateness (Group 2a: items a & f, Group 2b: items b & e, Group 2c: items c & g, Group 2d: items d & h).

Reasons for selecting a non-substantive response category
The vast majority of respondents (83 %) justified their non-substantive responses to the items by saying they had not previously thought about the topic and had too little knowledge to express an informed opinion:
  • "I do not feel well enough informed to express an opinion on this." (TP274)
  • "I haven't looked into this issue too much." (TP280)
Sporadically (n = 4), subjects indicated that they did not want to give reasons for their answers or did not want to disclose their opinions:
  • "I don't want to comment on this." (TP311)
  • "I do not want to reveal my personal opinion here." (TP550)

Evaluation of the adequacy of statements in a questionnaire.
As shown in Table 12, respondents felt that items a, b, and f were rather inappropriate to answer and items e, h, and g were rather appropriate to answer in a survey. Items c and d were in the middle in terms of ratings. Thus, with the exception of item e, those statements in which Jews are named as a group were rated as more inappropriate than those statements in which Israel's treatment of Palestinians is addressed.

When asked about the reasons why the individual items were perceived as "rather/very inappropriate," the test persons explained that items a, b, and f were racist, antisemitic, or inappropriate in a survey, while for items g and h they argued primarily that they lacked the knowledge to answer the items:
  • "I don't think it's okay to ask such questions." (TP320, item a)
  • "The statement is antisemitic and provocative." (TP360, item a)
  • "Because this question alone can be discriminatory to some. And it blankets Jews." (TP249, item b)
  • "I find this statement rather inappropriate as it is rather blunt. Certainly, only racists and antisemites will agree with this statement." (TP420, item b)
  • "I find the phrase 'makes me dislike more and more' very inappropriate." (TP293, item f)
  • "It's not appropriate." (TP344, item f)
  • "I haven't dealt with it enough to have a real opinion on it." (TP367, item h)

Cognitive Techniques:

Specific Probing
Item Text Actively tested
a. The interests of the Jews in Germany are very different from the rest of the population.
[Die Interessen der Juden in Deutschland unterscheiden sich sehr vom Rest der Bevölkerung.]
No
b. It is always better to be a little careful with Jews.
[Es ist immer besser, bei Juden etwas vorsichtig zu sein.]
No
c. Even today, the influence of Jews is too great.
[Auch heute noch ist der Einfluss der Juden zu groß.]
No
d. Many Jews try to take advantage of the past of the Third Reich today.
[Viele Juden versuchen, aus der Vergangenheit des Dritten Reiches heute ihren Vorteil zu ziehen.]
No
e. I am annoyed that the Germans are still reproached with the crimes against Jews today.
[Ich ärgere mich darüber, dass den Deutschen auch heute noch die Verbrechen an den Juden vorgehalten werden.]
No
f. Israeli policy makes me dislike Jews more and more.
[Durch die israelische Politik werden mir die Juden immer unsympathischer.]
No
g. I get angry when I think about how Israel treats Palestinians.
[Ich werde wütend, wenn ich daran denke, wie Israel die Palästinenser behandelt.]
No
h. Israel is waging a war of extermination against Palestinians
[Israel führt einen Vernichtungskrieg gegen die Palästinenser.]
No