Introduction to U.S. Census
Transcript of Introduction to U.S. Census
Introduction to the U.S. Census
AP Human Geography - Damon2016
U.S. Census Facts• A decennial (once every 10 years) survey of the population• Mandated by U.S. Constitution• First U.S. Census in 1790 by U.S. Marshals on horseback• Participation required by law• Counts all residents (differs from citizens)• Data kept confidential for 72 years• 2010 budget = $797 million ($200 million for marketing)• Census data used:
– To apportion seats in the U.S. House of Representatives– To allocate Electoral College votes– To distribute $400 billion+ in federal funds– To draw legislative districts (for state legislatures and U.S House of
Representatives)– To better understand the U.S. population
Which states and regions gained representatives? Lost? Why?
Electoral Vote Apportionment After Census 2010
Data Collection• Census forms mailed• Citizens respond by mail• Census takers follow up via phone and
personal visit with non-respondents
Which states and counties had the best participation? The worst? Possible reasons why? What difference does it make? (Look back at what census data is used for …)
Census Questions Reflect Changing Demographic Realities
Questions have been added, dropped and changed as social norms have changed.
A Few U.S. Census Controversies …
GIS Helps Us Visualize Census Data
Spend some time exploring the New York Times Mapping the U.S. Census site linked on our Wikispace. Use the View More Maps and
Zoom to a State pull-down menus to change the views.
Census Hierarchy
We can map and analyze the U.S. population at a variety of scales from national all the way down to the census block.
Your house or apartment is on a census block, within a census block group, within a census tract, within a census place, within a census MCD, within a
census county, within a state, within a census division, within a census region within our nation!
Explore The 2010 Census Form
http://www.census.gov/2010census/about/interactive-
form.php