Everyone's personality is based on birth order. Very early life experiences form these personalities. How we perceive the world gets filtered by our birth order.
The term "birth order" has two meanings. It can refer to the actual place in the family, such as only, oldest, middle and youngest child or it can refer to the personality associated with the place in the family.
Exceptions
Exceptions occur because of age differences, day-care situations, maternal stress when the child is around two, adoption, and multiple births.
How Many Are There?
Birth Order personalities consist of only child, first born, second born, third born and fourth born. In large families birth order repeats.
In The Beginning
The concept of birth order comes from psychiatrist Alfred Adler who, early in the last century, suggested that it consisted of oldest, middle and youngest child, was caused by parents and variations could occur because of gender differences. Understanding birth order was advanced with the discovery of the five birth order personalities in 1970.
Birth order personality is created by early childhood experiences.
The only child must learn to play alone without feeling lonely.
The first born copes with the loss of attention to the new baby.
The second born competes with the first born.
The third born endures teasing from the second born.
The fourth born feels the impact of being rejected by the third born. The fourth born ignores the fifth child so the birth order cycle repeats.
During these early experiences, children make the decisions that determine their personalities. Once set, usually by age two, birth order personality is fixed for life. Blended families may challenge children but do not change their birth order personalities. The children simply cope using their birth order strategies.
The Value
The value of knowing birth order is to understand personalities. Understanding each other enhances relationships. Marriages improve, parenting becomes more effective, friendships more enduring and cooperation more common. Life gets better at home, workplace and in society.
In the next articles, we will look more closely at each of the personalities.
Cliff has authored several books on the topic: The Birth Order Effect: How to Better Understand Yourself and Others, The Birth Order Effect for Couples, How To Love Your Children: Birth Order For Parents, The Birth Order Challenge: Expanding Your Horizons, Look at it This Way: Reframing Life's Experiences, 112 Ways to Say What You Want, and Understanding Yourself Through Birth Order.
Copyright article 2006 Cliff Isaacson. All Rights Reserved.
The copyright of the article Intro to Birth Order Plus in Educational Issues is owned by Barbara Pytel. Permission to republish Intro to Birth Order Plus in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
Comments
Jun 2, 2006 12:31 PM
Irene Taylor :
Hi Barb and Cliff,
Thanks for the beginning of a great series - Cliff, we welcome you as a guest writer.
I love this idea - and I was especially struck with the thought that even in blended families, birth order doesn't change. I'd imagine being the first born in one family, for example, and then suddenly finding oneself with two older "siblings" would be challenging, but it is interesting to know that the first born would use his "first-born" skills to cope and not take on other coping behaviors.
I'm a first born, so I'll be interested to hear what you say about that - are we natural-born teachers??
Thanks for the start of a great series!
Irene
Jun 2, 2006 1:15 PM
Barbara Pytel :
Irene, I don't know the statistics on first born teachers, but in our middle school, the majority are first born. I once took a class on birth order for teachers. The instructor, who cleverly knew the outcome, asked for 1st borns to go to the right side of the class and all others to go to the left. In a class of approximately 20, I believe there were 3 or 4 on the left. The majority were firsts. Writers tend to be seconds. Leaders tend to be firsts. You will enjoy Cliff's series. His website is filled with information, also. I think this is critical information for teachers, parents and the students.
Jul 20, 2006 12:15 PM
Barbara Doyen :
It is easy to confuse one's birth order position with one's personality. I've read Cliff Isaacson's books, and he explains how all this works, why the first child may or may not be a First personality. Just being the first born child does not automatically make one a First Born in personality.