If there had been another of his firm’s polls in the field the weekend before Election Day, Porn said he was sure it would have shown the race even. Trump ended up winning the state by 11,000 votes.

Asked if he thought weighting by education would have changed the surveys’ results, he responded: “No, not at all.”

While neither poll is changing its approach to the education aspect, Franklin is tweaking one element of his surveying in order to get at another observation in the AAPOR report, which noted that some Trump supporters who participated in polls prior to the election didn’t reveal their allegiances.

The report noted that could be because the voters decided late to vote for Trump, or they misreported their stances in the polls, the so-called “Shy Trump” effect.

Franklin said he’s looking to get at that by pushing respondents to select a candidate in a given race. For example, after initially asking respondents who they’d cast their ballots for, a pollster would follow that up with the question: “If you had to decide today, how would you vote?”