The Role of Emotional Intelligence in College Students' Success

The purpose of this study was to determine if higher academic performance was positively correlated to higher emotional intelligence among traditional age male and female college students enrolled in an Introduction to Business course at a large multi-campus state college in Florida. The Bar-On 2004...

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Main Author: Walsh-Portillo, Joyce G
Format: Others
Published: FIU Digital Commons 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/etd/491
http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1598&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-fiu.edu-oai-digitalcommons.fiu.edu-etd-15982018-01-05T15:29:53Z The Role of Emotional Intelligence in College Students' Success Walsh-Portillo, Joyce G The purpose of this study was to determine if higher academic performance was positively correlated to higher emotional intelligence among traditional age male and female college students enrolled in an Introduction to Business course at a large multi-campus state college in Florida. The Bar-On 2004 (Emotional Quotient Inventory) EQ-i 133-item inventory was used to assess students’ emotional intelligence. Within the scope of this ex-post facto study, a quasi-experimental design was included to further determine if emotional intelligence could be increased through the inclusion of a curricular component on emotional intelligence. Four groups of students (N=111) participated in the three-phase study over two semesters. The first phase (pre-intervention) was limited to students with an established GPA and an attempted-to-completed credit hour ratio within the institution (N=82). Results showed a slight positive correlation between the two factors and the students’ emotional intelligence pretest assessment scores. The second phase of the study involved establishing a control and an experimental group in each of two semesters to compare the attainment of overall emotional intelligence scores as measured by the EQ-i. The third phase of the study examined four measures of academic success (GPA, the attempted-to-completed credit hour ratio, grade in the business course, and persistence in college) to determine if these factors were positively correlated with the students’ posttest EQ-i scores. The study also included a research question to determine if significant differences in overall EQ-i scores existed between male and female students during the three phases. Findings from the study indicated that (a) there was a slight positive correlation in the pre-intervention stage between emotional intelligence and traditional measures of academic success specifically, GPA and the attempted-to-completed credit hour ratio; (b) curricular intervention made a significant difference at the p <.05 level, with an .5 effect size, in one semester but failed to meet that threshold in the following semester with the second pair of groups; (c) at the post-intervention phase, the four measures of traditional academic success yielded a low positive correlation with the students’ emotional intelligence assessment scores, and (d) female students showed significant gains in their overall EQ-i scores. 2011-10-27T07:00:00Z text application/pdf http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/etd/491 http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1598&amp;context=etd FIU Electronic Theses and Dissertations FIU Digital Commons emotional intelligence college students community college Higher Education Administration
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic emotional intelligence
college students
community college
Higher Education Administration
spellingShingle emotional intelligence
college students
community college
Higher Education Administration
Walsh-Portillo, Joyce G
The Role of Emotional Intelligence in College Students' Success
description The purpose of this study was to determine if higher academic performance was positively correlated to higher emotional intelligence among traditional age male and female college students enrolled in an Introduction to Business course at a large multi-campus state college in Florida. The Bar-On 2004 (Emotional Quotient Inventory) EQ-i 133-item inventory was used to assess students’ emotional intelligence. Within the scope of this ex-post facto study, a quasi-experimental design was included to further determine if emotional intelligence could be increased through the inclusion of a curricular component on emotional intelligence. Four groups of students (N=111) participated in the three-phase study over two semesters. The first phase (pre-intervention) was limited to students with an established GPA and an attempted-to-completed credit hour ratio within the institution (N=82). Results showed a slight positive correlation between the two factors and the students’ emotional intelligence pretest assessment scores. The second phase of the study involved establishing a control and an experimental group in each of two semesters to compare the attainment of overall emotional intelligence scores as measured by the EQ-i. The third phase of the study examined four measures of academic success (GPA, the attempted-to-completed credit hour ratio, grade in the business course, and persistence in college) to determine if these factors were positively correlated with the students’ posttest EQ-i scores. The study also included a research question to determine if significant differences in overall EQ-i scores existed between male and female students during the three phases. Findings from the study indicated that (a) there was a slight positive correlation in the pre-intervention stage between emotional intelligence and traditional measures of academic success specifically, GPA and the attempted-to-completed credit hour ratio; (b) curricular intervention made a significant difference at the p <.05 level, with an .5 effect size, in one semester but failed to meet that threshold in the following semester with the second pair of groups; (c) at the post-intervention phase, the four measures of traditional academic success yielded a low positive correlation with the students’ emotional intelligence assessment scores, and (d) female students showed significant gains in their overall EQ-i scores.
author Walsh-Portillo, Joyce G
author_facet Walsh-Portillo, Joyce G
author_sort Walsh-Portillo, Joyce G
title The Role of Emotional Intelligence in College Students' Success
title_short The Role of Emotional Intelligence in College Students' Success
title_full The Role of Emotional Intelligence in College Students' Success
title_fullStr The Role of Emotional Intelligence in College Students' Success
title_full_unstemmed The Role of Emotional Intelligence in College Students' Success
title_sort role of emotional intelligence in college students' success
publisher FIU Digital Commons
publishDate 2011
url http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/etd/491
http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1598&amp;context=etd
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