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Judi Lynn

(162,358 posts)
Fri Oct 30, 2020, 02:22 AM Oct 2020

Doing Well in Life? Thank Your Big Sister


OCTOBER 27, 2020
Pamela Jakiela and Owen Ozier

In almost all human societies, older children help their parents care for younger siblings. In OECD countries, this assistance is typically confined to watching out for younger children in the backyard or on the playground, playing with them, and occasionally helping them with snacks, electronic devices, and other “needs” that might normally require assistance from an adult. But our society is WEIRD, as Harvard anthropologist Joseph Henrich has observed, and WEIRD countries—Western Educated Industrialized Rich Democracies—are not necessarily representative of the human experience. Older siblings—particularly sisters—play a much larger role in caring for young children in many low- and middle-income country (LMIC) contexts, particularly in rural areas and among households engaged in subsistence agriculture and other forms of domestic production (as anthropologists Sarah Hrdy and David Lancy describe in their excellent—and compellingly readable—books Mothers and Others and The Anthropology of Childhood). Because “alloparents”—individuals such as grandparents or older siblings who help raise children other than their offspring—are so important in such contexts, and because older sisters tend to do more of such “sibcare” than older brothers, anthropologists have long been aware of the potential for a sister effect. The most extreme effects are dramatic: for example, in the Gambia in the mid-20th century, the presence of an older sister made subsequent children more likely to survive. In fact, the importance of sisters as alloparents is so widely acknowledged that a well-known anthropologist who saw me present an early version of our economic research on big sisters said something to the effect of “it may well be true, but it’s a bit anthro 101.”

In spite of this, the role that older sisters play in childrearing is often ignored in research and policy discussions of early childhood—even as donors, governments, and researchers invest more and more in programs intended to improve parenting practices, encourage households to invest in their young children, and boost health, nutrition, and cognitive development outcomes for the 250 million children in LMICs who are at risk of failing to meet their developmental potential. Widely used survey measures of early childhood stimulation—for example, the Family Care Indicators questionnaire included in UNICEF’s Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys—capture the extent to which adults engage in stimulating activities (such as reading, singing, or physical play) with three- and four-year-olds; but the Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys doesn’t even record stimulating activities undertaken by siblings under age 15. Most impact evaluations also ignore the potential impact of early childhood development interventions on older children. In ongoing work with David K. Evans and Heather Knauer, one of us (Pam) finds that only four of 475 impact evaluations of early childhood development interventions in LMICs measure spillover effects on children in middle childhood or adolescence.

However, the few impact evaluations that look for such spillovers often find them. For example, Sebastian Martinez, Sophie Naudeau, and Vitor Pereira found that building community preschools in Madagascar improved educational outcomes for older siblings, while Marcella Alsan found that a vaccination campaign in Turkey improved literacy among older sisters. In earlier work, one of us (Owen) found that a “deworming” program that provided free medication to treat intestinal parasites to all primary school children had positive spillovers on the cognitive development of babies under the age of two, and that the effect was strongest among children who had older sisters in primary school (receiving the deworming treatment). These empirical patterns can be explained by the special relationship between older sisters and young children in many LMIC contexts—older sisters do much of the childcare while mothers are busy with farming, paid work, and other household tasks.

In our new paper with Lia C. H. Fernald and Heather Knauer—“Big Sisters”—we model these tradeoffs, attempting to incorporate some of anthropologists’ insights about sibling alloparents into standard economic models of investment in early childhood. To test the predictions of our model, we use data from the baseline survey of an ongoing early literacy intervention in rural Kenya to estimate the “impact” of having a big sister rather than a big brother (restricting attention to the quarter of our sample that has exactly one older school-aged child at home). We find that young children with an older sister (as opposed to an older brother) score about 0.12 standard deviations higher on an age-adjusted index of early childhood development. For comparison, this “effect” of having a big sister is about as large as the difference in child development between young children whose mother completed secondary school and those whose mother only completed primary school. We observe treatment effects of big sisters on both vocabulary and fine motor skills, and impacts seem to be concentrated in the lower half of the distribution (of child development outcomes). We can’t say precisely why these patterns occur, but detailed data on early childhood stimulation activities undertaken by both parents and other household members provide some clues. For one thing, we can see that older sisters do more stimulating activities with their younger siblings than anyone else in the household, even averaging across households where there is no older sister present (see figure below).

More:
https://www.cgdev.org/blog/doing-well-life-thank-your-big-sister
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Doing Well in Life? Thank Your Big Sister (Original Post) Judi Lynn Oct 2020 OP
Just my casual observation has always been that Captain Zero Oct 2020 #1

Captain Zero

(7,495 posts)
1. Just my casual observation has always been that
Fri Oct 30, 2020, 02:55 AM
Oct 2020

Guys with an older sister are 'better' guys, at least among my friends I noticed that.
It started by noticing my better male friends all had an older sister.
Noticed it in high school and college.
Totally unscientific.
Just an IMHO.

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