Using matched asymptotic expansions, we derive an equivalent bar model for a periodic, one-dimensional lattice made up of linear elastic springs connecting both nearest and next-nearest neighbors. We obtain a strain-gradient model with effective boundary conditions accounting for the boundary layers forming at the endpoints. It is accurate to second order in the scale separation parameter ɛ≪1, as shown by a comparison with the solution to the discrete lattice problem. The homogenized modulus associated with the gradient effect (gradient stiffness) is found negative, as is often the case in second-order homogenization. Negative gradient stiffnesses are widely viewed as paradoxical as they can induce short-wavelength oscillations in the homogenized solution. In the one-dimensional lattice, the asymptotically correct boundary conditions are shown to suppress the oscillations, thereby restoring consistency. By contrast, most of the existing work on second-order homogenization makes use of postulated boundary conditions which, we argue, not only ruin the order of the approximation but are also the root cause of the undesirable oscillations.