Much research has been written on how birth order affects family relationships. In terms of esteem, view of the family dynamic, and one’s ability to enter successfully into romantic relationships, birth order has been found to play a significant role (Kidwell, 1981; Kidwell, 1982; Schilling, 2001). The purpose of this paper is to examine social, mental and biological factors of birth order while also examining an individual’s position in the family and how it may have an impact on behavior and personality.
Birth order refers to the numerical position of a person who is born in a family (Schilling, 2001). For the purposes of this paper, the discussion will focus primarily on three groups—first born, middle born, and last born. These three groups comprise three distinct experiences of place within the family context. The eldest born is the first child: he has no older siblings from whom to get an example. He sets the example for his younger siblings. His attitudes and experience are different from the middle born, who sees in the eldest an example and can play off that example, respond to it, and think on it. The last born is in a different position altogether. He is viewed differently and perhaps more sentimentally by parents than the other two—for one reason being that he is the last born and no more children follow. It is why the last born is often referred to as the baby of the family. He typically receives more doting affection than the other two, while the oldest is typically given a greater degree of responsibility by virtue of his being oldest and first into the world. The middle born tends to be the forgotten child, feeling not quite so confident as the oldest nor quite so loved as the youngest (Kidwell, 1982). Gender, too, plays a factor in the development of these children’s perspectives (Kidwell, 1981). Thus, birth order is not alone in serving as a factor in the social, mental and biological development of a child; but it is an important factor.
Schilling (2001) looks specifically at how birth order affects the development of three...
References
Kidwell, J. S. (1981). Number of siblings, sibling spacing, sex, and birth order: Their effects on perceived parent-adolescent relationships. Journal of Marriage and the Family, 315-332.
Kidwell, J. S. (1982). The neglected birth order: Middleborns. Journal of Marriage and the Family, 225-235.
Rohrer, J. M., Egloff, B., & Schmukle, S. C. (2015). Examining the effects of birth order on personality. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 112(46), 14224-14229.
Schilling, R. M. (2001). The effects of birth order on interpersonal relationships. The McKendree College Journal of Undergraduate Research, 1, 1-12.
Sulloway, F. J. (2001). Birth order, sibling competition, and human behavior. In Conceptual challenges in evolutionary psychology (pp. 39-83). Springer, Dordrecht.
" e) Develops abilities the first child doesn't exhibit. f) if the first child is successful, they may feel uncertain of themself and their abilities. g) May be rebellious. h) Often doesn't like their position. i) Feels "squeezed," if a third child is born. j) May push down other siblings (Birth, 5). Laterborns tend to use low-power strategies, such as whining, pleading, humor, social intelligence, offers of reciprocal altruism, and, whenever
Once I went to school, I became more comfortable around other children my age. Still, all through school I remember my peers saying I talked like an adult and knew many words they had never heard of. This was not deliberate because I preferred to fit in with my peers, but, as Adler points out (in Stein), an only child will often talk more like an adult because he
In a within-family design, 96 undergraduate and graduate students rated themselves and their siblings on a 12-item extraversion scale taken from the NEO-Five-Factor Inventory. One-sample tests revealed, as predicted that first-borns rated significantly higher than later-borns on the facet of dominance and later-borns rated significantly higher on the facet of sociability." (2006) The work entitled: "Tracking the Elusive Human, Vol. II: Reading: Type and Genetics from Chapter 13" states the
Birth Order and Psychology In previous years there have been quite a bit of research conducted on the subject of birth order and personality. However research on this matter has declined in at least the last 10 to 20 years. In all regards, it is the common perception that people who are first-born have the strongest disposition and have leadership tendencies. Research also tends to point out that children who are
Birth Order and Juvenile Delinquency Psychologists have long studied the effects of birth order on a person's personality. Sigmund Freud, for example, believed that "the position of a child in the family order is a factor of extreme importance in determining the shape of his later life" (cited in Sulloway 1996: 468n). The rest of social sciences, however, have been slower to accept such a sociobiological approach, preferring instead to explain social
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