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Contributions of family size, birth order, socioeconomic status, and parent-child relationships to young children's intellectual development

The purpose of this study was to investigate the relationship of family size, birth order,
socioeconomic status, and parent-child relationships to young children's intellectual
development.
Seventy-four children, 39 boys and 35 girls, with a mean age of 4 years-8 months,
and their parents (mothers and fathers), selected from 9 preschool programs and daycare
centers in Corvallis, Oregon, acted as subjects for this study. Ninety-five percent of the
families came from upper or upper-middle socioeconomic classes. All the families were
intact, consisting of children and their biological parents, representing one-, two, and three-child
families. The children in this study were either first-, second- or third-born children.
Family socioeconomic status was determined via Hollingshead's Four Factor Index
of Social Status. Information on family size and birth order was obtained through a
Demographic Questionnaire. Parent-child relationship was assessed via the Parent
Attitude Research Instrument-Short Form. Children's intellectual level was measured
with the Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test-Revised. Zajonc and Markus' Confluence
Theory, Page and Grandon's Admixture Theory, and Falbo and Polies Parent-Child
Relationships Theory were utilized as the basis for investigating the relative contributions
of family size, birth order, socioeconomic status, mother-child relationship, and father-child
relationship to children's intellectual development. The regression procedure was
used in data analyses. The .05 probability level was used as the criterion for statistical
significance.
Findings revealed that the variables of socioeconomic status and quality of father-child
relationships contributed significantly to children's intellectual development. The
higher the socioeconomic status of the family, and the more supportive the father-child
relationships, the higher the children's intellectual development scores. Birth order and
family size made no contributions to children's intellectual development. These findings,
therefore, provided support for Page and Grandon's Admixture Theory and Falbo and
Polies Parent-Child Relationships Theory, but not for Zajonc and Markus' Confluence
Theory. / Graduation date: 1995

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:ORGSU/oai:ir.library.oregonstate.edu:1957/35163
Date24 May 1994
CreatorsLiang, Shu
ContributorsSugawara, Alan I.
Source SetsOregon State University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis/Dissertation

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