Title: Exploring Emotional Intelligence with Students
1Exploring Emotional Intelligence with Students
- ACPA Pre-Convention Workshop 10
- Philadelphia, PA
- April 1, 2004
Dr. Allen Lomax, Western Carolina University Dr.
Gary Low, Texas AM University-Kingsville Ms.
Mona Jackson, Texas AM University-Kingsville
2Who are we?
- Gary
- Researched the area of EI for the past 25 years
- Developed EI assessment surveys
- Emotional Intelligence Achieving Academic and
Career Excellence (Prentice Hall 2003) - Allen
- Counselor and higher education administrator
- Author and director of the Title V grant that
funded the Javelina EI Program - Emotionally transformed advocate for Emotionally
Intelligent Organizations - Mona
- 15 years Higher Education experience.
- Director of the Javelina EI Program, (Spring 2002
Spring 2004) - Developed and coordinated the implementation of
the university-based Seven Step EI Program in
student success classes. - Provided EI Training to faculty, administrators,
and students.
3Goals for Today
- Share a positive and practical model of human
behavior. - Have an enjoyable day.
- Have a highly productive afternoon.
- Be comfortable with us and each other.
4Objectives for Today
- Operationally Define Emotional Intelligence as an
education based model. - Explore applications of a self-assessment survey
of EI skills. - Experience one emotional skills assessment
approach for self and student development. - Connect EI with traditional student development
models. - Draft a campus plan for implementation.
5Reasons why students leave college
64 KEYS TO SUCCESS AND HEALTH
- HEALTHY RELATIONSHIPS
- TRUE FEELING OF BELONGING
- PERCEIVED COMPETENCE
- HEALTHY BALANCE BETWEEN THE EMOTIONAL AND
COGNITIVE MIND
7DEFINITION OF EI
- EI is a confluence of learned abilities to know
and value self, develop and maintain healthy
relationships, work effectively with others, and
manage daily stress.
8EI is related to
- High levels of achievement
- Personal commitment to self-defined standards of
excellence - Goal Persistence
- Reaching the goal despite difficulties or
stressors - Physical and Emotional Health
- Healthy ways of living.
- Career Success
- Jobs and Family
- Leadership
- Leadership is learned!
9RESEARCH DERIVED BELIEFS ABOUT EI
- EI is a learned ability.
- EI is (may be) the single most important variable
in achievement, career development, leadership,
satisfaction. - Learning EI requires an active, caring,
person-centered, and self-directed learning
process. - EI consists of skills and competencies that can
be learned. - EI is a necessary foundation to build success in
education, work, and life. - Emotional Intelligence helps break the habit of
Emotional Reactivity.
10EMOTIONAL LEARNING SYSTEM
- EXPLORE Person-Centered Assessment
- IDENTIFY Skills Areas to Improve
- UNDERSTAND Key Skills Impact
- LEARN Develop, Strengthen, Enhance Skills
- IMPROVE Use Model EI Skills, Behaviors,
Attitudes Daily
11EI Skills and Achievement
- Significant Relationships
- Assertion
- Drive Strength
- Commitment Ethic
- Time Management
- Stress Management
12EI Skills and Achievement
- Inverse Relationships
- Aggression
- Change Orientation
13Emotionally Intelligent Characteristics
- Emotionally
- Reactive
- Overwhelmed too often
- Reactive to stress
- Self-doubting
- Resistant to change
- Pessimistic
- Relies on reactive habits
- Continually makes the same mistakes
- Emotionally
- Intelligent
- Resilient
- Planned response to stress
- Self-confident
- Flexible, open to change
- Optimistic
- Relies on positive habits
- Learns from experience
14THINGS TO REMEMBER
- Excellence an Individual Process that is
Self-Defined and Directed - Intentional Growth, Development, Change is a
Skilled Choice - Successful People Realize their Own Strengths
Weaknesses - Problem Areas (Weaknesses) are Perceived as
Challenges and Achievable - Base Self Worth Integrity on Things that You
Can Control Achieve
15Your Profile
- Scoring
- Lets connect the dots!
- Visual Picture of EI Skills
16Garys Profile
17Allens Profile
18Monas Profile
19Group Work
- What does your profile look like?
- Identify 2 areas of strength
- Identify 2 areas that need to be developed
- How do you use your EI skill (strength) of ?
- Strategy(s) you use when you are in difficult
situations? - After discussion add 2 strategies shared today
which you can practice to enhance your develop
areas
20BREAK10 Minutes
21Emotional Intelligence and Student Development
Theories A Unifying Theme and A Research
Challenge
22Emotional Intelligence Connections with Student
Development Theories
23Psychosocial Theories
- Chickering
- 1st Vector-Competence
- 3 tines of the fork (intellectual, physical,
interpersonal) - 2nd Vector (Managing Emotions)
24Psychosocial Theories
- Schlossbergs Transition Theory
- The transition process is a persons reactions to
the transitions over time
25Psychosocial Theories
- Schlossbergs Transition Theory
- Emotional reactions are integral to the 4 Ss of
coping - Situation (trigger, timing, control, role change,
duration, previous experience, concurrent stress,
assessment) - Self (socioeconomic status, gender, age, stage of
life, ego development, commitment) - Support (intimate relationships, family, friends,
community) - Strategies (modify, control meaning, manage
stress)
26Cognitive Theories
- At one time I flirted with the idea that we dont
even have an interior life, that behavior is all
that matters and theres no reality to the
interior life. I think this is one of many
reasons for academias emphasis on positivism,
the ascendance of science, which deals with
things you can directly observe and measure. The
implication is that the interior either doesnt
exist or, if it does, it is not very important
because it cant be objectified. Astin (2003)
27Cognitive Theories
- For a long time Ive been arguing that we havent
paid enough attention in higher education to the
affective side of our students development
their beliefs, their values, their politics and
that weve been swayed to focused on how they do
on tests and whether they follow the rules and
regulations and how many credits they earn and
their GPAs. The latter focuses on the exterior
self and life and reflects a bias toward the
cognitive rather than the affective.
28Cognitive Theories
- I have been worrying about this because the
worlds problems are not going to be solved by
math and science and technology they are human
problems, problems of beliefs and values and
feelings expressed, for example, by racism or
nationalism or religious fundamentalism. It
would behoove higher education to begin to attend
more to these aspects of students development.
Astin (2003)
29Emotionally Intelligent Development
Cognitive Theories
- Emotionally Reactive
- Overwhelmed too often
- Reactive to stress
- Self-doubting
- Resistant to change
- Pessimistic
- Relies on reactive habits
- Continually makes the same mistakes
- Emotionally Intelligent
- Resilient
- Planned response to stress
- Self-confident
- Flexible, open to change
- Optimistic
- Relies on positive habits
- Learns from experience
30Cognitive Development Theories
31Cognitive Development Theories
- Baxter-Magolda Epistemological Reflection
32Cognitive Development TheoriesKohlberg and
Gilligan
- Kohlberg male population
- Gilligan both genders and development is
relationship dependent
33Typology Theories of Development
- Hollands Theory of Vocational Personalities and
Environment - Myers-Briggs Typology
- In general, the typology theories are interested
in peoples preferences for environments,
behaviors, modes of thinking, and avenues of
emotional reaction. For these theories to work
most effectively as a developmental tool, one
must be willing and able to trust what their
feelings tell them and confidently take action
based upon decisions arising from how one feels.
34Emotional Intelligence An Avenue for
Connecting Student and Academic Affairs
35Avenues for Connecting SA and AA
- Fundamentally different approaches
36Avenues for Connecting SA and AA
- We asked them about spirituality, meaning,
purpose, and value and were amazed at how ready
they were to talk. According to some of the
people we interviewed, the interviews were almost
therapeutic they were so glad to have an
opportunity to talk about these issues. And
everyone agreed that academia doesnt create safe
spaces for such conversations to occur. Astin
(2003)
37Avenues for Connecting SA and AA
- One of the early assumptions as this study was
being undertaken, was that faculty and students
place relatively little value upon human
relationship building in the educational process
because of the institutional structures that
support autonomy and rational objectivism. One of
the most revealing surprises coming from this
study was that faculty and students, despite
current institutional structures, do place a
great deal of importance upon the establishment
and the development of human relationships within
the many different aspects of the learning
process. Lomax (2000)
38Elements of Connections
- Engagement
- Behavioral Skills
- Leadership Skills
- Self-confidence
- Inter and Intra-personal Skills
- Power of Building the Self, Continue Learning
- Rumaldo Juarez, EI Institute, February 26, 2004
39Javelina EI Program
- University-wide Program
- Freshman Success Course
- Engages student academically experientially
- Interdisciplinary team of faculty,
administrators, and graduate/undergraduate
students
40EI Program Data
- Involves all 5 undergraduate colleges
- 29 Sections of First Year/Foundations Course
- 26 Foundations Course Instructors
- 12 Guest Presenters (Faculty, Staff,
Administrators) - 28 Student Group Facilitators (undergraduate and
graduate level) - 864 Students
41Javelina 7 Step EI Program
- Step 1 Positive Assessment of EI skills
- 1201 Instructor
- Steps 2 3 Emotional Intelligence and its
significance to college success - Trained EI Guest Presenter and student group
facilitator - Steps 4 6 Group Work
- Trained student group facilitator
- Step 5 Homework
- Step 7 Turn in EI Packet
42Group Work
- What does the student profile look like?
- Identify 2 areas of strength
- Identify 2 areas that need to be developed
- How could students use strength EI Skills?
- Strategy(s) students could use when they are in
difficult situations? - After discussion add 2 strategies shared today
which students can practice to enhance their
develop areas
43Student 1 Profile
44Student 2 Profile
45Student 3 Profile
46Student 4 Profile
47Student 5 Profile
48Student 6 Profile
49Campus Applications
- Texas AM University-Kingsville
- Western Carolina University
50Potential Resources
- Womens Center
- Counseling Center
- Student Activities
- Residence Life
- Career Center
- Advising Center
- International Office
- Rec. Sports
- Service Learning
- Athletics
- Library
- Classroom
- Faculty
- 1st year experience
- Internships
- Commuter Services
- Graduate Services
- Multicultural
51Your own campus
- Identify the student population that you
predominantly work with on your campus. - Identify an Emotional Intelligence Skill need,
for that population. - Identify present Campus Resources that can be
used to help students enhance EI skill
development. - Identify some strategies offered by these
resources. - Draft a plan to link present Campus Resources to
your students in order to develop their EI Skills.
52- Questions
- and
- Evaluations
53Contact Information
Emotional Intelligence A New Student
Development Model.A Paper Presented at the 2004
National Conference of the American College
Personnel Association in Philadelphia Pennsylvania
Emotional Intelligence Effectively Bridging the
Gap Between High School and College
http//education.tamuk.edu/eiconf/.
Emotional Intelligence Institute