The trends that can influence voter turnout from that list are: type of election, job occupation, and internet access. Number of children is not generally considered a standard factor in voter‑turnout questions in civics materials.

Correct options

  • Type of election – People vote at higher rates in big, high‑salience elections (like presidential elections) than in local or off‑year contests.
  • Job occupation – Work schedules, job security, and professional networks can affect whether someone has time, flexibility, and motivation to vote.
  • Internet access – Online information, registration tools, and digital mobilization can make it easier to learn about elections and turn out to vote.

Why “number of children” is not included

  • Standard civics and test‑prep explanations of voter turnout do not list “number of children” as a key turnout “trend” in the way the question is framed, whereas the other three are explicitly treated as valid answers for this exact multiple‑choice item.

TL;DR: Choose: Type of election, Job occupation, Internet access.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.