Publications & Resources

Moving into a New Council Year

11/18/2022

On the heels of a highly successful virtual conference, your 2021-22 AAPOR Council has been hard at work planning for the new year. The articles in this month’s newsletter provide some sense of not only the activities underway but also some of the incredible passion and pride AAPOR volunteers have for the association.

Since our conference in May, AAPOR has released its task force report on the 2020 pre-election polls. The 20-person task force, representing the expertise and multiple sectors of AAPOR, was chaired by Joshua Clinton, and the project reflects the Herculean efforts of numerous parties. Past President Dan Merkle spearheaded and shepherded the task force; numerous Council members and members of our communications team at Kellen reviewed and edited the report; and Communications Chair Marco Morales crafted a multi-pronged outreach plan that included other AAPOR volunteers and organizations. For instance, the Pew Research Center released a Q&A blog post, starring Josh and Scott Keeter, on the report’s implications. Thank you all!
 
Also behind the scenes is continuous work on AAPOR’s journals. An ad-hoc committee chaired by Tim Johnson created an overarching governance structure that now falls under the purview of the Education Committee. On a more forward-facing front, Journal of Survey Statistics and Methodology will be joining Public Opinion Quarterly in publishing a guest-edited fifth issue each year; JSSAM also has a new statistics editor, Jenny Thompson, who is already working with her advisory committee to identify a topic for that first special issue. Welcome aboard, Jenny!
 
As AAPOR approaches its tenth year publishing these two journals with Oxford University Press, we have taken time to reflect on sea changes in the publishing landscape. These include the shift to online/online-only publishing as well as the rise and traction of open access. As a result, more journals exist today than ever before, marketing strategies have evolved, and the sheer nature of disseminating research has changed drastically. Under the leadership of Peter Miller, an ad-hoc working group has reviewed the state of the publishing world and its implications for AAPOR’s journals. POQ editors Allyson Holbrook and Eric Plutzer and JSSAM editors Kristen Olson and Jenny Thompson will continue working with our publishers at OUP to ensure that these two journals remain vibrant and serve our readership to the fullest extent possible.
 
Change remains a constant in the world of AAPOR. As methods continue to evolve, AAPOR works hard to remain abreast of how our members’ livelihood might be impacted. Toward that end, Standards Committee Chair Ashley Kirzinger will be charging a task force to examine opt-in panels. Specifically, the task force will examine how metrics and guidelines developed for probability-based panels might or might not be appropriate for surveys conducted using opt-in panels or hybrid designs. In line with AAPOR’s educational focus, one deliverable of this task force will be a set of guidelines regarding sampling from online panels (both probability- and nonprobability-based) and data-quality considerations for surveys that employ such samples.
 
Finally, AAPOR Council remains busy as we transition to our own dedicated, full-time management staff. We’ve launched our search for an executive director, and I’ve had the great pleasure of working with the search committee on this front. My immense gratitude goes to Paul Beatty, Nancy Belden, Mollyann Brodie, Jenny Hunter Childs, Bob Davis, Ricki Jarmon, Michael Link, and Kristen Olson for the time and energy they’ve devoted (and continue to devote) to this effort. I also am grateful to Jordon Peugh and Nora Cate Schaeffer for heading up a transition working group and liaising with Katie Geraghty, our interim executive director at Kellen, to ensure a smooth transfer of knowledge, systems, and assets. Thanks also go to Brad Edwards, who is chairing a committee that will oversee all matters related to human resources.
 
These are some of our summer (AAPOR) home projects, old and new. If you have questions, comments, suggestions, or ideas, please reach out!