Study Rejects Myth for Single Children

Does being a single child mean being selfish and spoiled? This is popular belief worldwide, but over decades psychological studies prove that they are simply prejudiced. These concepts were born in 1800 England, where a negative perception of single children was created based on a survey in which they participated [...]
Does being a single child mean being selfish and spoiled? This is popular belief worldwide, but over decades psychological studies prove that they are simply prejudiced.
These concepts were born in 1800 England, where a negative perception of single children was created based on a survey of 200 people, 196 of whom responded to being spoiled, sought to be the center of attention, didn't share their things with others, and didn't listen to anyone.
While scientific studies in recent years prove that this is far from true. Research and analysis made by children alone are like all children raised by brothers and sisters, and the only obvious difference with them is that they install a stronger, closer relationship with their parents. Another characteristic of them is that they are more creative in finding solutions to problems, perhaps because they're used to fixing things on their own. The psychological tests on two groups result in children with brothers and sisters being more tolerant, patient, and cooperative.










