We recognize that suggested that birth order is of vital importance to understanding. This study will study whether or not birth order has an effect on academic success by looking at the completed degree and projected degree. The null hypothesis is that no there will not be a significant difference between these two variables, which are birth order, and academic achievement. Methods
Participants
Sixty-four participants (52 women and 12 men) ranging in age from 18 to 70 years old, voluntarily participated in this experiment. All were assigned the same experimental task. In this experiment, informed consent was obtained from all participants. The sampling method used to gather participants was convenience sampling and participants were not compensated.
Materials
The materials used for this experiment included a survey, pen, and SPSS software. The survey consisted of questions asking about family size, birth order, listing sibling all ages, cumulative GPA. The survey packet consisted of a bill of rights form, consent form and demographics that included age, ethnicity, age, gender and the survey questions. The survey questions included fill in the blank questions and circling all that …show more content…
Although there was no correlation between birth order and GPA and/ or birth order and family size, our data found a negative correlation between birth order and predicted academic level completed. This study also suggested a negative correlation between culminate GPA and satisfaction which meant that participants with higher GPA’s were less satisfied than those with lower GPA’s. Participants, who stated to have had someone motivate them to become academically successful, predicted a higher level of education. These results could implicate that later borns are not expected to achieve as much academically as first-borns possibly because firstborns are the experimenting babies, which means that they could be expected do