Emotional intelligence and academic performance in students of compulsory secondary education

Authors

  • Miguel Ángel Broc Cavero Universidad de Zaragoza,

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5944/reop.vol.30.num.1.2019.25195

Keywords:

EQ-I, YV Bar-On, emotional intelligence, compulsory secondary education (CSE), academic achievement, multiple linear regression

Abstract

ABSTRACT
This work aimed to use the Bar-On EQ-i:YV Emotional Quotient Inventory: Young Versión, adapted to the Spanish population by researchers of the University of Murcia in 2012, to a sample of 345 students of Compulsory Secondary Education (CSE) in a public center in Zaragoza, with a high level of immigration and diversity. Through an "ex post facto" correlation design, we analyzed the influence that independent variables exerted on the dependent variable number of suspended subjects. Likewise, variance analysis, among others were carried out using the SPSS version 22 and Lisrel 8.51 program, finding that the data are similar to those obtained in the original study, that men outperform women in the factor of mood and adaptability, and that these outweigh those in the interpersonal factor and in academic achievement. Regression analysis show that only the Interpersonal and Stress Management factors enter into the prediction equation, with positive but low correlations that explain little amount of variance, and that there are almost no differences in the factors in the four courses of the this educational stage, suggesting a conceptualization closer to the theory of traits, or a more lax interpretation in terms of emotional development. The final conclusion is that this construct may have been somewhat oversized and does not have as much relevance in academic performance as some authors have claimed.

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Published

2019-07-01

How to Cite

Broc Cavero, M. Ángel. (2019). Emotional intelligence and academic performance in students of compulsory secondary education. REOP - Revista Española de Orientación y Psicopedagogía, 30(1), 75–92. https://doi.org/10.5944/reop.vol.30.num.1.2019.25195

Issue

Section

Research studies