A New Study Asks: How Do Kids Figure out Where They Stand Politically?
But the more they read about the origins of our political leanings, Streib said, the more they realized how little was known.
Some of the best-known studies to date tracked people from the end of high school onward, following them once or twice a decade until they reached middle age.
But when it comes to political views and orientation -- one's preferences about issues such as abortion, gender roles, whether a person identifies as liberal or conservative -- that most people鈥檚 core beliefs start to crystallize much sooner, before they reach adulthood.
That leaves researchers guessing about how the experiences we have up to that point influence our perspectives.
鈥淲e have very little data on what happens during those early periods,鈥 Johnston said.
Furthermore, previous studies followed people during a different political era, from the 1960s to the 1990s, when Americans were less and the media less fractured than they are now.
In an effort to fill the gaps, the researchers have teamed up with to launch a new study of children and their parents, starting with 10- to 12-year-olds.
They鈥檙e following them once every two years until they reach voting age to better understand how various influences during those formative years shape our politics.
Many factors 鈥 including family and religious upbringing, peer pressure, the media, -- all have a hand in shaping a person鈥檚 political ideology.
Typically, parents are one of the earliest influences on young people鈥檚 politics, Streib said.
But family dynamics can be complicated, she added. While most U.S. teens , some kids grow up in right- or left-leaning families only to cross party lines as adults.
Streib said she鈥檚 particularly interested in the values and political messages kids are exposed to at home, and how children respond when those messages conflict.
It may be that their parents talk about equality at the dinner table, while acting differently in their day-to-day lives -- by living in a gated community, for example, or treating people with disdain or suspicion just because they鈥檙e poor.
鈥淗ow do kids make sense of mixed messages like that?鈥 Streib said.
As we get older, 鈥渙ther influences come into play too,鈥 said Duke sophomore and Bass Connections team member Suhhyun Lee, recalling her first access to social media at age 13.
Add to that what kids pick up from their friends, at school, from elsewhere on the Internet.
鈥淲e want to know where kids are hearing about politics, what they鈥檙e interested in finding out for themselves and how that all shapes the way they ultimately develop,鈥 Streib said.
Some researchers argue that our political beliefs may be even more deep-rooted, embedded within our very nature or psychological make-up.
For example, studies have found that people with certain personality traits tend to lean toward one party or the other, Johnston said.
Republicans and Democrats tend to differ in how they relate to novelty and uncertainty, hence the on immigration issues such as border security and pathways to citizenship.
But just because there is a connection between personality and politics doesn鈥檛 prove that one caused the other, Johnston said.
鈥淚t is hard to pin down what causes what,鈥 Johnston said. 鈥淭o get at this, we need to start early to capture the period before these links are formed, so we can observe the causal sequence.鈥
Johnston stressed that the goal isn鈥檛 to teach kids about politics or shape people鈥檚 perceptions, but rather to understand how they grow up to hold a range of political views. 鈥淲e want a diversity of perspectives,鈥 he said.
To do that, the researchers are looking at participants鈥 views on a variety of issues, such as abortion and gay marriage, their personality traits, and their responses to questions like, 鈥淲hich is more important to you, curiosity or good manners?鈥
Aided by undergraduate students, the team conducted the first round of surveys with children and their parents this past fall, before the 2024 election, and will follow up with them with more in-depth interviews this spring.
And while today鈥檚 tweens won鈥檛 be eligible to vote in a presidential election until 2032, preliminary interviews suggest they already have nuanced views on politics.
鈥淚 think we were all really surprised at how much they knew,鈥 said Duke junior and Bass Connections team member Hava Stone. 鈥淭hey just really wanted to talk about what they thought.鈥
鈥淜ids are much more mature than you think they are,鈥 Johnston said.