Visualizing Change in Ordinal Measures: Religious Attendance in the United States (1972–2018)

Keywords

religion, religious attendance, data visualization, ordinal measures

Abstract

The figure plots self-reports of religious attendance using data from the General Social Survey (1972–2018), contributing to current debates about how religiosity is changing in the United States by clearly showing the relative increase or decrease of each level of religious attendance over time. The main new insight is that the observed decline in religious attendance in the United States has been driven primarily by a large increase in people reporting never attending religious services and a corresponding decrease in people reporting weekly attendance, rather than uniform changes across different levels. Some categories, such as attendance once a month, have seen virtually no change. More generally, the figure may be used as a template for plotting other ordinal measures over time, such as political attitudes or ideology

Original Publication Citation

Michael Wood. 2020. "Visualizing Change in Ordinal Measures: Religious Attendance in the United States (1972-2018)." Socius

Document Type

Peer-Reviewed Article

Publication Date

2020-01-09

Permanent URL

http://hdl.lib.byu.edu/1877/7905

Language

English

College

Family, Home, and Social Sciences

Department

Sociology

University Standing at Time of Publication

Assistant Professor

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