I was at a meeting the other day and
heard the term “Emotional Intelligence” used and watched around the room at
the glazed and bemused looks on the faces of those attending………………….so
A brief explanation…………
Emotional intelligence
(EQ)
Emotional intelligence theory (EQ - Emotional
Quotient)
Emotional Intelligence - EQ - is a relatively recent behavioural
model, rising to prominence with Daniel Goleman's 1995 Book called 'Emotional
Intelligence'. The early Emotional Intelligence theory was originally developed
during the 1970s and 80s by the work and writings of psychologists Howard
Gardner (Harvard), Peter Salovey (Yale) and John 'Jack' Mayer (New Hampshire).
Emotional Intelligence is increasingly relevant to organizational development
and developing people, because the EQ principles provide a new way to
understand and assess people's behaviours, management styles, attitudes,
interpersonal skills, and potential. Emotional Intelligence is an important
consideration in human resources planning, job profiling, recruitment
interviewing and selection, management development, customer relations and
customer service, and more.
Emotional Intelligence links strongly with concepts of love and spirituality: bringing compassion and humanity to
work, and also to 'Multiple Intelligence' theory which illustrates and measures the range of capabilities people
possess, and the fact that everybody has a value.
The EQ concept argues that IQ, or conventional intelligence, is
too narrow; that there are wider areas of Emotional Intelligence that dictate
and enable how successful we are. Success requires more than IQ (Intelligence
Quotient), which has tended to be the traditional measure of intelligence,
ignoring essential behavioural and character elements. We've all met people who
are academically brilliant and yet are socially and inter-personally inept. And
we know that despite possessing a high IQ rating, success does not automatically
follow.
Different approaches and theoretical models have been developed
for Emotional Intelligence. This summary article focuses chiefly on the Goleman
interpretation.
Emotional intelligence - two aspects
This is the essential premise of EQ: to be successful requires the
effective awareness, control and management of one's own emotions, and those of
other people. EQ embraces two aspects of intelligence:
·
Understanding yourself, your goals, intentions, responses,
behaviour and all.
·
Understanding others, and their feelings.
Emotional intelligence - the five domains
Goleman identified the five 'domains' of EQ as:
1.
Knowing your emotions.
2.
Managing your own emotions.
3.
Motivating yourself.
4.
Recognising and understanding other people's emotions.
5.
Managing relationships, i.e., managing the emotions of others.
Emotional Intelligence embraces and draws from numerous other
branches of behavioural, emotional and communications theories, such as NLP
(Neuro-Linguistic Programming), Transactional Analysis, and empathy. By
developing our Emotional Intelligence in these areas and the five EQ domains we
can become more productive and successful at what we do, and help others to be
more productive and successful too. The process and outcomes of Emotional
Intelligence development also contain many elements known to reduce stress for
individuals and organizations, by decreasing conflict, improving relationships
and understanding, and increasing stability, continuity and harmony.
No comments:
Post a Comment