Education and Emotions Research
The idea of emotional intelligence arose in the business community, where it was felt that traditional intelligence measures such as IQ testing were inadequate to explain all forms of intelligence. The idea of emotional intelligence was developed in the works of Daniel Goleman, and other scholars have sought to refine the concept. Frameworks such as those provided by Salovey and Mayer (1990) sought to define the traits of emotional intelligence and differentiate them from the more patterns and systems-based IQ-type intelligence. Indeed, by the mid-1990s, Goleman (1996) wrote that "school success is predicted largely by emotional and social measures," highlighting that scholars of emotion already recognized the value of developing emotional intelligence in order for students to perform better academically. It should not surprise anybody who works in education that emotional intelligence plays a role in success -- how a student handles stress, interacts with peers in a learning environment, and relates to teachers/professors all play a role in influencing his/her success.
The existing body of research has examined the role that emotions play in high school success (Parker, Creque et al., 2004; Marquez et al., 2006), in the transition from high school to university (Parker, Summerfeldt et al., 2004), on the links between EQ and deviant behavior in school (Petrides, et al., 2004). One of the unresolved issues with this field of study is that there are many individual variables that comprise emotional intelligence. Whatever links between emotional intelligence and academic achievement might be found, any one of these variables could conceivably be the primary explanatory factor (Barchard, 2003). Thus, study in this field should begin unravelling individual elements of emotional intelligence to test each facet of EI with respect to its ability to predict academic success.
This research will further explore the...
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