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Theories
of Communication MCM 511
VU
LESSON
33
AGENDA
SETTING THEORY
Initially
agenda setting was understood in a
relatively straightforward way.
Agenda setting as laid out
by
Maxwell
McCombs and Donald Shaw was
that `agenda-setting is the process
whereby the news media
lead
the public in assigning relative
importance to various public
issues.
A
change in thinking
The
agenda-setting hypothesis came about when
researchers became dissatisfied
with the dominant
theoretical
position in mass communication
research during the 1950s and the 1960s-
the limited effects
model.
Joseph Klapper stated in his
book effects of mass communication in
1960 when he wrote:
"Mass
communication ordinarily does
not serve as a necessary and
sufficient cause of audience
effects,
but
rather functions among and through a
nexus of mediating factors and
influences."
For
many years, the approach used in
communication research was to
look for attitude change and
most
of
the research had found that
the mass media have little effect in
this area. However,
researchers were
looking
at the wrong target. Maybe the
mass media had their effects on people's
perceptions their
views
of the world- rather than their
attitudes. The media agenda
influences the public agenda
not by
saying
this issue is important in an
overt way but by giving more
space and time to that issue
and by
giving
it more prominent space and time.
That is, if headlines of newspapers and
lead stories of
television
newscasts all highlight a
study. Example touting the
role of cholesterol in increasing
heart
disease
this issue is likely to be
seen as an important item on the
public agenda.
The
modern concept of agenda setting is
often attributed to Walter
Lipmann in 1922, who in his
book
Public
Opinion , argued that the mass media
create images of events in
our minds and that
policy
makers
should be cognizant (aware) of those
`pictures in people's heads.' Lipmann
emphasized that the
pictures
of reality created by the news media were
merely reflections of actual reality
and therefore
were,
sometimes distorted. He said
that news-media projections of the world
create a pseudo-
environment
for each news consumer. The
pseudo-environment exists in addition to the
actual
environment
, and people react to this
pseudo-environment. "For the real
environment is altogether
too
big,
too complex, and too
fleeting for a direct
acquaintance."
Other
scholars also described the concept of
agenda setting in their
writings prior to
empirical
assessment
of the concept in the early 1970s. In
1958, Norton Long
wrote:
"In
a sense, the newspaper is the prime
mover in setting the territorial
agenda, it has a great part
in
determining
what most people will be
talking about, what most
people will think the facts
are and what
most
people will regard as the way problems
are to be dealt
with."
In
1959 Kurt and Lang
wrote that the mass media
force attention to certain
issues. They build up
public
images
of political figures. They
are constantly presenting objects suggesting
what individual in the
mass
should think about, know
about, and have feelings about.
Lang summarized the role of the
news
media
in building the agenda in these
words:
First
the news media highlight some
events, activities, groups, personalities
and so forth to make them
stand
out. Different kinds of
issues require different
amounts and kinds of coverage to gain
attention.
This
common focus affects what people will
think or talk about.
Second
the object is, the focus of attention
still needs to be framed, it
must come to stand for
something-
some
problem or concern. The media can
play up or down the more serious
aspects of a situation.
The
third
step is the build up links the
object or events to secondary symbols, so
that it becomes a part of
the
recognized
political landscape.
103
Theories
of Communication MCM 511
VU
Something
like interest aggregation is involved,
since the line of division on the
particular issue does
not
always coincide with the cleavage between
the organized political parties or between
other sharply
defined
groups.
Finally,
spokesmen who can articulate
demands must make their
appearance, their effectiveness
stems
in
good part from their
ability to command media
attention.
First
empirical test
First
empirical test of Lipmann's
ideas about agenda setting
was published in 1972by two
University of
North
Carolina researchers, Maxwell
McCombs and Donald Shaw, in
what came to be known as
the
Chapel
Hill study. They designed a study to
test the influence of election campaign
coverage on public
perceptions
of the importance of issues. Prior to
election they asked Chapel
Hill voters "what are
you
most
concerned about these
days?"
The
issues they identified were
found almost identical agendas on the
part of news media.
Hence,
they
found an incredibly strong correlation.
the public agenda was a
virtual reflection of media
agenda.
They
named this `transfer of
salience' of issues from the
media to the public "the
agenda setting
influence
of mass communication.
After
this ground breaking study
in 1972, agenda setting
research caught fire among
communication
investigators,
with hundreds of studies being conducted
throughout the ensuing 25 years.
These
researches
included replication of the original
study conducted by Maxwell McCombs
and Donald
Shaw.
Contingency
Factors
The
second phase of agenda
setting research began when
researcher started looking
into a causal
direction
for agenda setting effects and
contingent conditions for
such effects. Researchers found
that
voters
with a greater need for
orientation to their world and voters
who used the mass media
more
frequently
than others were more likely to have
agendas that corresponded to the news
media agenda.
Weaver
proposed the finding in 1977 who
called this contingency
factor an individual's `need
for
orientation'.
Thus, an individual might believe
that economic policy is interesting
but might know
little
about
the topic. Such an individual
will be led to active use of
the media and would thus be more
likely
to
be influenced by the specific agenda
items highlighted in the press and on
television.
Other
extensions of the theory in this area
have included the notion that
educational level and
political
interest
might moderate the extent to which the
media set the agenda for
particular individuals.
Other
scholars
considered the ways in which some issues
might be more prone to the agenda
setting effect
than
others.
Most
important extension in this regard is the
concept of issue obtrusiveness. An issue
is obtrusive if
most
members of the public have had direct
contact with and less obtrusive if
audience members have
not
had such direct experience .e.g. foreign
policy.
It
is argued that agenda-setting results
should be strongest for
unobtrusive issues because
audience
members
must rely on the media for
information on these topics.
There
have also been debates about
how various types of media influence the
public agenda. Studies
have
revealed that broadcast media have a
quicker impact on the public
agenda; the agenda-setting
function
is more long lived for print
media.
In
an attempt to provide stronger evidence for
causal direction the next
major study of agenda
setting
was
conducted in a laboratory setting where the
researchers manipulated videotaped net
work television
newscasts
to vary the placement and emphasis given
to the stories.
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Theories
of Communication MCM 511
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Two
levels of agenda
setting
In
addition to considering contingency
factors that might influence
agenda setting, other theorists
have
extended
the theory to consider different levels
of agenda setting. McCombs, Shaw
and Weaver in 1997
make
the distinction between first and second
level agenda setting.
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