首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     检索      


Older siblings' contributions to young child's cognitive skills
Institution:1. Wuhan Institute of Technology, Wuhan 430073, PR China;2. University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA;1. Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, First Affiliated Hospital of Jinan University, Guangzhou, China;2. Department of Obstetrics, Obstetrics and Gynecology Affiliated Hospital of Fudan University, Shanghai, China;1. Faculty of Economics and Business, University of Groningen, P.O. Box 800, 9700 AV Groningen, The Netherlands;2. Department of Economics, Lund University, P.O. Box 7082, Lund SE-220 07, Sweden;3. Erasmus School of Economics Rotterdam, Burgemeester Oudlaan 50, PA Rotterdam 3062, The Netherlands;4. Institute of Labor Economics (IZA), Germany;5. Tinbergen Institute, The Netherlands;1. Department of Economics, Maastricht University, P.O. Box 616, 6200 MD, Maastricht, Netherlands;2. CPB Netherlands Bureau for Economic Policy Analysis, P.O. Box 80510 2508 GM, The Hague, Netherlands
Abstract:This work finds that older siblings as well as early parenting influence young children's cognitive skills directly or indirectly, for example, Mathematics, and English. Our findings challenge a pervasive view in the economical literatures that early parenting plays a dominant role in explaining child development. In economics, early environmental conditions are important to demonstrate the evolution of adolescent and adult cognitive skills (Cunha and Heckman, 2007, Knudsen et al., 2006), and it establishes causal impacts of early parental inputs and other environmental factors on cognitive and non-cognitive skills (Borghans et al., 2006, Cunha et al., 2010, Heckman et al., 2006b). Early parenting as well as older siblings should explain a diverse array of academic and social outcomes, for example, Mathematics, English, maritage and pregnancy. In fact, older siblings' characteristics are as important, if not more important, than as parenting for child development. Our analysis addresses the problems of measurement error, imperfect proxies, and reverse causality that plague conventional approach in psychology. We find that older brother contributes much more than older sister to child's mathematical achievement, while older sister contributes much more to child's English achievement. Our evidence is consistent with psychology literature, for example, Hetherington (1988), Jenkins (1992), Zukow-Goldring (1995), Marshall et al. (1997), Maynard (2002), and Brody et al. (2003) for siblings' direct contributions to child development, Bronfenbrenner (1977), East (1998), Whiteman and Buchanan (2002), and Brody et al. (2003) for siblings' indirect contributions, and Reiss et al. (2000), Feinberg and Hetherington (2001), and Kowal et al. (2002) for parental differential treatment.
Keywords:
本文献已被 ScienceDirect 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号