Toni Falbo
1947
American
Professor of Educational Psychology
Newman-Proshansky Career Achievement Award (2007)
George Washington University; University of California, Los Angeles
University of Texas at Austin
Biography[edit]
Falbo received her B.A. degree in psychology at George Washington University in 1968. She received her M.A degree in psychology and PhD in Social Psychology at University of California, Los Angeles in 1969 and 1973, respectively.[3] Falbo early work examined kindergarten children's attributions about academic achievement.[10] After holding positions at California State University, Long Beach and Wake Forest University, Falbo joined the faculty of Educational Psychology at the University of Texas at Austin in 1976.
Falbo began studying the development of only children in the 1970s.[11] She was drawn to this topic as an only child and the mother of an only child.[12] Her research has been funded through the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development,[13] the Ford Foundation, and the Hogg Foundation for Mental Health.
Research[edit]
Much of Falbo's research has focused on the psychological and social outcomes of small families, with an emphasis on sibling status effects on children's development and educational attainment. Other widely cited research has examined power dynamics and strategies in interpersonal relationships[14][15] and parental strategies associated with high school students' success.[16]
Falbo conducted extensive research examining effects of China's one-child policy on the personalities of Chinese children and adults.[17][18] Falbo aimed to determine whether China's one-child policy influenced children's academic, physical, social, and personality traits. In a synthesis of 22 studies of psychopathology among Chinese only children, Falbo and her colleague Sophia Hooper reported that only children felt more pressure and dealt with higher expectations from their parents than their peers with siblings.[19]
Falbo and her colleague Denise Polit conducted a series of meta-analyses of over 100 studies of only children that considered developmental outcomes in adjustment, character, sociability, achievement, and intelligence.[20][21][22] The studies included in the meta-analyses were mainly from the U.S. and Canada, yet were diverse with respect to socioeconomic class and race/ethnicity. The authors found no evidence in support of the stereotype that only children are lonely, selfish, and maladjusted.[12] Rather, only children tended to score higher on tests of verbal ability and intelligence than children with siblings (with the exception of firstborns who scored comparably to only children). Only children and firstborns also showed higher achievement (i.e., academic performance, educational attainment, occupational prestige) than children with older siblings. Falbo also found that only children surpassed children in large families in the quality of their relationships with parents.[20] Other work, which including children from China as well as the U.S., indicate advantages of older children with regards to character development (autonomy, maturity, leadership).[23]
Another study examined whether the presence of siblings promoted health over the lifespan.[24] Falbo and her colleagues examined the health status of a large sample middle age adults from the Wisconsin Longitudinal Study.[25] Using data from almost 4000 individuals (high school graduates of the class of 1957), the researchers found no effect of sibling status on health outcomes. Instead, they found evidence that better health was associated with having higher educational attainment and higher socioeconomic status.[24]