By JULIE WIENER
Jewish Telegraphic Agency
September 12, 2000
NEW YORK--The phones are ringing. But will anyone answer?
A long-awaited comprehensive survey of American Jews began dialing up households
around the country Sunday to find out such things as what percentage of Jews
marry non-Jews, what childhood experiences foster Jewish identity and how Jews
differ from other Americans.
The National Jewish Population Survey, sponsored by the national federation
umbrella organization, the United Jewish Communities, is expected to influence
funding and policy decisions of Jewish organizations for the next decade.
Its results, particularly concerning intermarriage, will be closely compared
to the 1990 version of the study, which created much communal soul-searching
when it reported that 52 percent of Jews who wed between 1985 and 1990 married
non-Jews.
That finding, which has been disputed by many sociologists who assert the true
rate is lower, prompted various continuity initiatives aimed at
strengthening Jewish identity.
After years of planning--and an eight-month delay as the sponsoring agencys
new leadership added input and questions were field-tested--the 35-minute questionnaire
is finalized. Researchers plan to interview some 4,500 Jews, almost double the
number interviewed in 1990.
In addition, 500 non-Jews associated with Jews--people married
to Jews or who have Jews in their families--will also be interviewed. Four thousand
non-Jews will receive a shorter version of the survey, so that researchers can
compare Jewish attitudes to those of the general public.
The surveys questions are being kept out of public view so potential
participants are not influenced, according to UJC officials.
The question among organizers now is whether enough people will participate
to get the data the researchers are seeking.
Besieged by telemarketers and increasingly pressed for time, fewer Americans
are responding to phone interviews, say researchers. This years U.S. Census,
a written survey distributed to every household in the country, yielded lower
response rates than in previous decades.
People are bombarded particularly by phone with requests for surveys
and so on, and many of them are not legitimate surveys but disguised advertising
or promotional activities, said Leonard Saxe, a sociologist and director
of Brandeis Universitys Cohen Center for Modern Jewish Studies.
In a recent study in Massachusetts, the Cohen Center offered Jewish teens $10
to complete a survey. Close to 85 percent of potential participants responded,
far higher than the 60 to 70 percent rate most studies consider to be successful,
said Saxe.
For the first time, the NJPS is also offering an incentive, although more modest
than the teen survey. Each respondent will designate $2 in UJC funds as a contribution
to the American Cancer Society, the March of Dimes or the American Heart Association.
As a nonprofit organization, the UJC feared it would appear unseemly to offer
larger or non-charitable incentives to respondents, say officials.
However, some involved with the process say offering larger incentives would
probably save the organization money in the long run, given the difficulty of
locating Jewish households at random.
If a person hangs up and refuses to participate, it might take another
$10-15 to find another cooperative Jew, said Ira Sheskin, a professor
of geography at the University of Miami and a member of the population studys
National Technical Advisory Committee.
But the P.R. of having to pay people didnt go over well with a
lot of people, Sheskin said, explaining the UJCs ultimate decision.
Budgeted at $5 million, the survey is expected to be completed by the end of December,
with preliminary results available in the spring of 2001. A full report of the
studys findings will be published in approximately a year, say UJC officials,
along with shorter highlight reports analyzing how the findings might
be used to shape policy for specific groups, such as synagogues, federations and
Jewish community centers.