Educational Attainments of Children with Adopted Siblings

Author:

Fletcher Jason123ORCID,Greenberg Jan345,Mailick Marsha345,Song Jieun5,Wolfe Barbara1367

Affiliation:

1. La Follette School of Public Affairs

2. Department of Sociology

3. Center for Demography of Health and Aging

4. Sandra Rosenbaum School of Social Work

5. Waisman Center

6. Department of Economics

7. Department of Population Health Sciences

Abstract

Although adoption is a widespread phenomenon in the United States, little research has examined the effects on biological siblings. This article uses two representative datasets to compare educational attainments of individuals who grew up with an adopted sibling and those that did not. We find large heterogeneity (based on sex, family income, and cohort) in the outcomes of those with an adopted sibling. Brothers appear more influenced than sisters. For brothers, we find that family income moderates differential associations, where males from low-income families have lower education if they have an adopted sibling, but males from higher-income families do not. Our results have implications for our understanding of family dynamics as well as how sex shapes educational attainments of children.

Funder

Institute of Research on Poverty, University of Wisconsin-Madison

national institute on aging

waisman center

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Social Sciences (miscellaneous)

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