The purpose of this study was to examine the correlation between birth order and academic achievement in college students. More specifically the question asked was: Is there a relationship between the order in which one is born and the level of their grade point average (GPA).
PARTICIPANTS
There were a total of 87 participants involved in this study, including both males and females. All participants were undergraduate students attending Arkansas Tech University and each were enrolled in a general psychology course. The participants received no compensation for their involvement in the study and could choose rather or not to participate.
PROCEDURES
In this experiment, the relationship between birth order, personality, and how the participants felt they related to their family were tested. When birth order was studied there was no correlation between any of the variables. However, the correlation between personality and the participants’ relation to their family was almost significant.
Results from this study might be due to several factors. One factor was the location of where the participants took the survey. Two different rooms were used in this survey: one in a bright room with windows, the other in a dim room with no windows. This may have caused the participants to have significant differences in moods; therefore, prompting them to answer in a certain way.
Another factor taken in to account was the participants themselves. A majority of the people who participated in our survey were freshmen, many of whom may have moved away from home. This move may have resulted in conflict of the participants’ feelings of how they relate to their family. Also, the participants may not have decided what their major will be, another aspect that was taken into account in the survey. The number of participants might also have been a contributing factor. Eighty-seven students took the survey; however, a larger sample might have produced different results.
A few surveys were faulty. One question asked for the approximate grade point average; however, it did not consider those who were in their first semester of college. Some participants also left questions unanswered or answered multiple ways when there should have been only one response.
Previous studies have conflicting data as to the significance of the correlation between birth order and GPA. Two studies reported a low but significant correlation between birth order and GPA (Sass & Lexmond, 1981). One of those studies stated that siblings in earlier birth order positions tend to have higher grade point averages (Sass & Lexmond, 1981). However, another study claimed that those in earlier birth order positions did not have higher grade point averages (Phillips & Phillips, 1994). In conclusion, this study found that there was no correlation between grade point average and birth order.
Sass, E.J., & Lexmond T. (1981). Family configuration, intelligence, and grade point averages
of college students. The Journal of Psychology, 107, 53-55.
Vonderheide, S.G. (1978). Birth order and college grade point average. Psychological Reports, 42, 150.
GPA Birth Order Personality Family Relation GPA -- .483 .346 .327 Birth Order .483 -- .404 .117 Personality .346 .404 -- .075 Family Relation .327 .117 .075 --
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