Title of article
Emotional intelligence and scholastic achievement in Australian adolescents
Author/Authors
Luke A. Downey، نويسنده , , Jessica Mountstephen، نويسنده , , Jenny Lloyd، نويسنده , , Karen Hansen and Con Stough، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages
8
From page
10
To page
17
Abstract
The current study examined the relationship between emotional intelligence (EI) and scholastic achievement in Australian
adolescents. Two hundred and nine secondary school students (86 males and 123 females) each completed the Adolescent
Swinburne University Emotional Intelligence Test (SUEIT) and academic achievement data was collected for all subjects
from year seven to eleven. Academic success was found to be associated with higher levels of total EI, via assessment of the EI
of different academic levels (80th percentile, 20th percentile, and middle groups). Regression analyses also revealed that
dimensions of the Adolescent SUEIT differentially predicted secondary school subject grades: Emotional Management and
Control was found to significantly predict Maths (r2¼0.06) and Science (r2¼0.04); the Understanding Emotions sub-scale
significantly predicted scores for Art (r2¼0.12) and Geography (r2¼0.08). It was concluded that the development of EI may
offer educators significant opportunities to improve scholastic performance and emotional competencies.
Journal title
Australian Journal of Psychology
Serial Year
2008
Journal title
Australian Journal of Psychology
Record number
707333
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