Abstract: | In a sample of 61,829 US families, the probability of having an additional child is higher in those families with all the children the same sex as compared to those families with children of both sexes. Data are from families of American high school students who took the National Merit Scholarship Qualifying test in 1965. All families with 3 or 4 children were selected. Families with only boys were more likely to have an additional child than families with all girls. Less than 1% of the variance in family size is explained by family configuration. Although the sample size makes these results unequivocal for the population involved, the population is clearly biased in favor of white middle class families. |