A recent study conducted on behalf of Harvard University's Institute of Politics found that around a third of four-year college students said using online tools like Facebook, Twitter and YouTube has a greater impact than in-person advocacy.
The "Survey of Young Americans' Attitudes toward Politics and Public Service" study, conducted by Knowledge Networks in February, found that 32 percent of college students with Facebook accounts believe advocating for a political position using online tools has more of an impact than advocating in-person.
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%0D%0A%20%20The%20"Survey%20of%20Young%20Americans'%20Attitudes%20toward%20Politics%20and%20Public%20Service<%2Fa>"%20study,%20conducted%20by%20Knowledge%20Networks<%2Fa>%20in%20February,%20found%20that%2032%20percent%20of%20college%20students%20with%20Facebook%20accounts%20believe%20advocating%20for%20a%20political%20position%20using%20online%20tools%20has%20more%20of%20an%20impact%20than%20advocating%20in-person.%0D%0A%0D%0A%0D%0Ahttps%3A%2F%2Fwww.nonprofitpro.com%2Faggregatedcontent%2Fmany-college-facebook-users-say-web-advocacy-better-than-in-person%2F" target="_blank" class="email" data-post-id="19968" type="icon_link"> Email Email
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