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Sibling relationships reflect family dynamics

11.14.06 | Society for Research in Child Development

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Most children in the United States grow up with sisters and brothers. Connections that usually last a lifetime, these relationships can be strained at times, especially during childhood. New research concludes that sibling ties are best understood in the context of their families, and that efforts to improve relationships should take into account not just the siblings, but the family as a whole.

This research also found that, overall, sisters feel closer to their siblings than do brothers, and that relationships between sisters and brothers become closer in later adolescence. Further, for all siblings, discord is highest when the first-born child is about 13 and the second-born is about 10.

As reported in the November/December 2006 issue of the journal Child Development, researchers at Pennsylvania State University interviewed mothers, fathers, and first- and second-born children in 200 white, working- and middle-class, two-parent families. During the course of the study, first-born children ranged from 10 to 19 years of age, with an average age of 12 at the start of the study and 17 at the end. Second-born children ranged from 7 to 17 years of age during the study, with an average age of 9 at the start and 15 at the end.

Among the study's key findings are:

"This study showed that sibling relationships change across childhood and adolescence, with many siblings reporting that they have relationships in later adolescence that are more positive and have less conflict," according to Ji-Yeon Kim, the study's lead author and research associate at Pennsylvania State University. "Sibling relationships are part of the larger family system of relationships and may both affect and be affected by marital and parent-child relationships."

Summarized from Child Development, Vol. 77, Issue 5, Longitudinal Course and Family Correlates of Sibling Relationships from Childhood Through Adolescence by Kim, J, McHale, SM, Osgood, DW, and Crouter, AC (The Pennsylvania State University). Copyright 2006 The Society for Research in Child Development, Inc. All rights reserved.

Child Development

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Contact Information

Andrea Browning
abrowning@srcd.org

How to Cite This Article

APA:
Society for Research in Child Development. (2006, November 14). Sibling relationships reflect family dynamics. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LNM27P41/sibling-relationships-reflect-family-dynamics.html
MLA:
"Sibling relationships reflect family dynamics." Brightsurf News, Nov. 14 2006, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LNM27P41/sibling-relationships-reflect-family-dynamics.html.