Survey of Public Participation in the Arts (SPPA), United States, 2017 (ICPSR 37138)

Version Date: Sep 12, 2018 View help for published

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National Endowment for the Arts; United States. Bureau of the Census.

https://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR37138.v1

Version V1 ()

  • V3 [2019-02-04]
  • V2 [2018-10-03] unpublished
  • V1 [2018-09-12] unpublished

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Additional information may be available in Collection Notes.

This version of the SPPA 2017 data collection is being released prior to the completion of full curation in order to facilitate early access for research purposes. Please note that this version of the data collection does not contain the complete technical documentation. An update to this collection, including a fully processed data file with standardized labels and codes, online analysis tools, and the complete technical documentation will be made available in Fall 2018.

SPPA 2017

This version of the SPPA 2017 data collection is being released prior to the completion of full curation in order to facilitate early access for research purposes. Please note that this version of the data collection does not contain the complete technical documentation. An update to this collection, including a fully processed data file with standardized labels and codes, online analysis tools, and the complete technical documentation will be made available in Fall 2018.

The Survey of Public Participation in the Arts (SPPA) 2017 collection is comprised of responses from two sets of surveys, the Current Population Survey (CPS) and the SPPA supplement to the CPS administered in July 2017. This supplement asked questions about public participation in the arts within the United States, and was sponsored by the National Endowment for the Arts.

The CPS, administered monthly by the U.S. Census Bureau, collects labor force data about the civilian, noninstitutionalized population aged 15 years or older living in the United States. The CPS provides current estimates of the economic status and activities of this population which includes estimates of total employment (both farm and nonfarm), nonfarm self-employed persons, domestics, unpaid helpers in nonfarm family enterprises, wage and salaried employees, and estimates of total unemployement. The basic CPS items in this data provide labor force activity for the week prior to the survey. In addition, the CPS provides respondents' demographic characteristics such as age, sex, race, marital status, educational attainment, family relationships, occupation, and industry.

In addition to the basic CPS questions, interviewers asked supplementary questions on public particiaption in the arts of two randomly selected household members aged 18 or older from about one-half of the sampled CPS households. The supplement contained questions about the respondent's participation in various artistic ativities over the last year. If the selected respondent had a spouse or partner, then the respondent answered questions on behalf of their spouse/partner and the spouse/partner responses are proxies.

The 2017 SPPA included two core components: a questionnaire used in previous years to ask about arts attendance and literary reading, and a newer survey about arts attendance, venues visited, and motivations for attending art events. In addition, the SPPA supplement included five modules designed to capture other types of arts participation as well as participation in other leisure activities. Questions included items on the frequency of participation, types of arrtistic activities, training and exposure, musical and artistic preferences, school-age socialization, and computer and device usage related to the arts. The five modules were separated by topic:

  • Module A: Consuming Art via Electronic Media
  • Module B: Performing Art
  • Module C: Creating Visual Art and Writing
  • Module D: Other Leisure Activities
  • Module E: Arts Education, and Arts Access and Opportunity
  • Respondents were randomly assigned to either of the core questionnaires, and were then randomly assigned to two of the five additional modules so that each module was administered to a portion of the sampled cases.

    National Endowment for the Arts, and United States. Bureau of the Census. Survey of Public Participation in the Arts (SPPA), United States, 2017. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor], 2018-09-12. https://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR37138.v1

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    National Endowment for the Arts

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    Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research
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    2017
    2017-07

    This version of the SPPA 2017 data collection is being released prior to the completion of full curation in order to facilitate early access for research purposes. Please note that this version of the data collection does not contain the complete technical documentation. An update to this collection, including a fully processed data file with standardized labels and codes, online analysis tools, and the complete technical documentation will be made available in Fall 2018.

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    The Survey of Public Participation in the Arts (SPPA) supplement to the CPS was conducted to examine American adults' participation in the arts and other leisure activities.

    The SPPA supplement was administered to about one-half of eligible CPS households. Computer-assisted telephone interviews were conducted in July of 2017. The SPPA survey allows proxy responses for spouses or partners and in a larger household a second supplemental interview was often conducted.

    The SPPA was conducted as part of the Current Population Survey, an ongoing data collection effort of the United States Census Bureau. About 60,000 occupied households are eligible for a CPS interview each month. Sample households are selected by a multi-stage stratified statistical sampling scheme. The SPPA supplement was administered to about one-half of the sample of CPS households. The SPPA surveys randomly sampled adults and accepted proxy responses for spouses or partners.

    Cross-sectional

    The Current Population Survey universe consisted of all persons aged 15 years or older in the civilian, noninstitutionalized population living the households in the United States. The 2017 SPPA supplement universe is comprised of persons aged 18 years or older that participated in the CPS.

    Individual
    survey data
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    2018-09-12

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    The data contain seven basic CPS weight variables:

  • Household Weight, HWHHWGT, should be used for tallying household characteristics.
  • Family Weight, PWFMWGT, which should be used only for tallying family characteristics.
  • Longitudinal Weight, PWLGWGT, should be used for gross flow analysis and is found only on adult records matched from month to month.
  • Outgoing Rotation Weight, PWORWGT, should be used for tallying information collected only in outgoing rotations.
  • Final Weight, PWSSWGT, is used for most tabulations, controlled to independent estimates for 1) states; 2) origin, sex, and age; and 3) age, race, and sex.
  • Veterans Weight, PWVETWGT, should be used for tallying veteran's data only, controlled to estimates of veterans supplied by the VA.
  • Composited Final Weight, PWCMPWGT, is used to create the Bureau of Labor Statistics' published labor force statistics.
  • The supplemental weight associated with the July 2017 SPPA Supplement is PWSUPWGT

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    Free and easy access to data on the arts and on the arts' value and impact for individuals and communities