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Are Second-Born Kids More Rebellious?

by Hemalatha Manikandan on December 13, 2023 at 2:03 PM
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Highlights:

Second-born children have long been assumed to be the troublemakers in the family. And now that theory is supported by scientific data.


Second-born children are in fact more likely to behave rebelliously, according to a study by MIT economist Joseph Doyle. T And that goes double for second-born born.

All About the Second Child Syndrome

Firstborns frequently outperform secondborns in a variety of areas, including IQ, test scores, educational achievement, and even job market results. On the other hand, second-born children are more likely to engage in bad behaviors like school suspensions, violent crimes, and delinquency (1).

‘Did you know? Second-born kids are 20-40% more likely to end up in disciplinary action than first-born kids. #secondborn #rebellious #siblingcontrast #birthorder #medindia’

Doyle examined data sets of families in Florida and Denmark. Despite the large differences in geographic area and environments, the findings were "remarkably consistent results."

He stated that second-born boys in families with two or more children are roughly 20-40% more likely than first-born boys to receive disciplinary actions at school and end up in the criminal justice system.

Boys are the focus subject of his research because they are far more likely than girls to get into severe problems when they are teenagers. A small percentage of children-roughly 1 in 10 or 1 in 20-are getting into serious problems, and among these children, there seem to be significant differences between first- and second-born brothers.

Reasons Why Second-Born are More Troublesome

Compared to firstborns, children who are second-borns are more prone to be rebellious for the following reasons:

Road Ahead- Strategies & Considerations

Recognizing the uniqueness of the child's needs and fostering an environment that nurtures their strength can pull them from negative to positive outcomes. A supportive family environment along with educational and policy changes could cater to the potential behavioral differences among siblings that could alter the birth order dynamics.

Ultimately, behavior is not defined by birth order but by the ecosystem where the child is nurtured.

Reference:
  1. Birth Order and Delinquency: Evidence from Denmark and Florida - (https:www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/10.1086/704497)

Source: Medindia

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