Emotional Intelligence - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 24
About This Presentation
Title:

Emotional Intelligence

Description:

... to go beyond a positivist view of science (Corrie & Callaghan, 2000) ... Weird bunch oh, the rota's been done... Thinking, feeling, judging and perceiving ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:110
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 25
Provided by: anl
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Emotional Intelligence


1
Emotional Intelligence CoachingA marriage
made in heaven? A Tale From the Field
  • Margaret Chapman John Arnold
  • 1st Australian Evidence-Based Coaching
    Conference, Sydney, July 2003.

2
Structure of Presentation
  • Background
  • Approach
  • Method
  • Intervention
  • Evaluation
  • Reflections implications for EBC
  • Final thoughts from the team

3
Background
  • EI poorly conceptualised speculative
  • Nevertheless captured popular attention worldwide
  • Few empirical studies on how to develop EI,
    particularly in non-managerial population
  • Whilst coaching espoused as important, what
    techniques are useful, are ignored
  • First reported attempt to explore role of
    coaching in developing EI amongst non-executive
    population

4
Approach
  • Action research
  • Case study Pilot
  • Public sector, housing
  • City Council, East of England, UK, 1000
  • 7 Housing officers
  • Merger of two teams
  • Integration development
  • Best practice guidelines
  • Cherniss Adler, 2000
  • EI intervention
  • Chapman, 2001

What?
Who?
Research Focus
How?
5
Method
1. Secure Commitment
Best Practice Cherniss Adler (2000)
2. Prepare for Change
4. Evaluate
3. Train Develop
6

EMOTIONAL INTELLIGENCE AS A TEAM DEVELOPMENT
STRATEGY
Secure Org Commitment
Prepare for Change
Train Develop
Monitor Evaluate


Move when time / culture right
Assess Needs Org / individual
Feedback
Identify business case / find a powerful champion
Set goals / integrate / build support
Emotionally Intelligent Team
EI interventions / experiential Coaching
Establish benchmarks
From Chapman, 2001 (Adapted from Cherniss
Adler, 2000)
7
Intervention
Psychometric Assessments
Team EI Development
Journal
Workshops
Coaching
8
1. Secure Commitment
  • Introduce EI to Head of Housing
  • Presentation to SMT
  • Proposal on approach benefits (why?)
  • Outline Intervention (what and how)
  • Briefing to participants
  • Establish benchmarks

9
2. Prepare for Change
  • Assessments
  • Team/Individual Personality
  • MBTI
  • Emotional Intelligence
  • Boston EIQ
  • ASE EIQ 360 for team leader
  • Verbal Written Briefing on theory background
    to EI
  • Interviews Goals of EI to develop
  • Team Identity unity
  • Cohesion, collaboration commitment to shared
    values
  • Raise profile
  • Engender positive working relationships
  • Build climate of trust, openness, support
    learning
  • Create an environment that is dynamic, fun
  • AND get the job done!

10
3. Train and Develop
5-Step Model of EI (Chapman, 2001)
Feedback
Coaching
5. Emotional Coaching
Transformational Incorporating Distributed Practic
e
Training
4. Relationship Management
3. Self Motivation
Self Reflection
Cognitive Affective Learning
2. Emotion Management
1. Self-Awareness
Multiple Intelligences
11
Workshops
  • 1 day a month over five months
  • Each workshop centred on 1 of the 5 steps
  • Pre-workshop briefing (written timetable)
  • Learning review (pre-work team issues)
  • Icebreaker
  • Combination of facilitated input theory on
    EI/topic experiential exercises feedback
    paired exercises syndicate work team goal
    setting eliciting metaphors video poetry
    music drawing
  • Use of multiple intelligences (VAK)
  • Review and action planning

12
Coaching Model
  • Integrative Coaching
  • Neuro-Linguistic Programming
  • NLP Dilts et al. 1980 OConnor, 2001
  • Cognitive Behavioural Coaching
  • (CBC Neenan Palmer, 2001)
  • Rational Emotive Behavioural Therapy
  • (REBT Ellis, 1955)

13
E-Coaching Process
  • 5 x 1 hour 11 sessions (in between prior to
    workshops)
  • Structured around E-Coaching
  • process
  • Alliance
  • Assessment
  • Analysis
  • Alternatives
  • Action Planning
  • Application
  • Review, feedback evaluation
  • Models NLP CBC REBT

14
4. Evaluate Change
  • Post Measures of EI for Team Members (Boston EIQ)
  • Across all 5 dimensions (self-awareness emotion
    management self motivation relationship
    management e-coaching) overall EI mean scores
    had increased
  • Differences between pre post measures are
    statistically significant in 4 of 5 dimensions,
    one exception being emotion management
  • Most significant shifts reported on Intrapersonal
    dimensions in line with literature, that
    suggests self-awareness is the cornerstone of EI
  • Goleman (1998) it is the self-awareness of
    emotional intelligence that differentiates it
    from otherdevelopment

15
(No Transcript)
16
Evaluation Quantitative
  • Post Measure of Team Leaders EI as measured by
    ASE 360-degree EIQ indicate a widening gap
    between the managers own perception of EI and
    that reported by her team members
  • Finding runs counter to literature that suggests
    that colleagues ratings on 360-degree feedback
    tend to be lower than self-assessments

17
Illuminative Evaluation(Parlett Hamilton in
Bramley, 1996)
  • Concern with description interpretation
  • Achieved through progressive focusing
  • Systematic reduction of breadth of enquiry to
    concentrate on emerging themes
  • Values diversity of thoughts, feelings opinions
    of all stakeholders
  • Method Focus Group interviews
  • Findings centre on views and outcomes of
    programme participants

18
Outcomes of EI Intervention to Housing Officers
  • Emphatic agreement as to the importance of the
    coaching element within EI
  • Provided space to reflect an opportunity to
    explore their feelings about incidents at work (
    recorded in journal) and other people with whom
    they interacted to explore issues arising from
    workshopsdevelop clearer goals to widen their
    perceptions of themselves and others and to
    broaden their horizons

19
Outcomes to Housing Officers
  • Cognitive orientation of coaching enabled
    individuals to tilt their worlds slightly
    identify the relationship between their thoughts,
    feelings and behaviours
  • Providing empirical support for Becket (2000)
    observation that coaching encourages individuals
    to increase their self-awareness of thinking,
    moods and emotions (in Neenan Palmer, 2001)
  • Nevertheless despite value of coaching strong
    belief that to develop EI you need both I.e.
    coaching and workshops
  • In terms of Interpersonal dimension of EI, the
    illuminative evaluation reveals increased levels
    of team cohesion, collaboration appreciation of
    individual differences, leading to mutual
    understanding, both within the team and other
    teams with whom they interact

20
Reflections
Increase in self Reported EI
Coaching and Emotional Intelligence is indeed a
marriage made in heaven
Feeling that EI Had improved
Integrative Framework
21
Implications for EBC
  • Small but significant piece of evidence that
    coaching is a worthwhile activity
  • Useful illustration of the scientist-practitioner
    model in action (not universally accepted these
    days as a legitimate model for applied
    psychology)
  • In coaching, such a model is possible, if one is
    willing to go beyond a positivist view of science
    (Corrie Callaghan, 2000)

22
Future Challenges
  • Findings suggest that both 11 and group
    experiences are needed to develop EI, future
    research might incorporate a control group, that
    does not experience coaching intervention
  • How do we define coaching? as first author was
    both group facilitator and coach, could whole
    intervention been coaching? (11 and team?)
  • Further challenge To identify which elements of
    the coaching approach reported here, make a
    difference, not only in terms of techniques, but
    also the quality of the coaching relationship

23
Some final thoughts from the team
  • Six individual, individuals in a room, with two
    psychologists and a Cosmopolitan quiz
  • Maybe that will get them to sort out the weekly
    rota?
  • Navel Gazing and poking around
  • Exposing some feeling
  • So thats why they do that
  • Weird bunch oh, the rotas been done
  • Thinking, feeling, judging and perceiving
  • Sense or intuition?
  • Introvert or extravert
  • Scientific gibberish to give 6 individuals the
    excuse that they need
  • on every and any occasion

24
And so the tale ends
  • Time for motivatingto raise those low scores
  • Some positive self-talk and goals to prepare
  • Yuck! this is too positive, too touchy-feely
  • Ahathats better S Club 7 will send some
    reeling
  • Strength and stability, thats what theyve got
  • Its time to share and break down the rot
  • We can do it! (Should, ought and must)
  • Its our turn to prove it and to get Best Value
    sussed!
  • So thanks to one great psychologist and all of
    you
  • Weve got 6 wonderful individual, individuals
  • Ohand a new rota to do (Sept, 2002)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com