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Older siblings smarter: study
First born children in Norway get better education and as adults are more successful in the job market than younger siblings, a Norwegian-U.S. study shows. "It is the birth order and not necessarily the size of the family that is important," said economics professor Kjell Salvanes of the Norwegian School of Economics and Business Administration. Salvanes and two colleagues from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) based their study on census data of Norwegians born between 1912 and 1975. The findings will be published in the Quarterly Journal of Economics, a Harvard publication, in May. They found that younger siblings tend to get less schooling than their elders and then end up with lower pay on average and were more likely to be in part-time work, Salvanes said. And first-born children tend to weigh more at birth than their younger brothers and sisters, which is a good predictor for educational success, Salvanes said. First-born children seem to learn from teaching their younger siblings, contrary to the common notion that younger children benefit by learning from their elders, Salvanes said. Children alone with two adults also tend to get more intellectual stimulation
than children in large families who get less parental attention, he
said
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