Raising Emotionally Intelligent Child

The most famous model for testing the emotional intelligence of a child is “self-awareness, assertiveness, self-regard, self-actualization, independence, empathy, interpersonal relationships, social responsibility, problem-solving, reality testing, flexibility, stress management, stress tolerance, i...

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Main Author: Al-Sudani, Marwa Saleh (author)
Published: 2015
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Online Access:http://bspace.buid.ac.ae/handle/1234/781
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author Al-Sudani, Marwa Saleh
author_facet Al-Sudani, Marwa Saleh
author_role author
dc.creator.none.fl_str_mv Al-Sudani, Marwa Saleh
dc.date.none.fl_str_mv 2015-12-22T07:58:01Z
2015-12-22T07:58:01Z
2015-03
dc.format.none.fl_str_mv application/pdf
dc.identifier.none.fl_str_mv 2013101057
http://bspace.buid.ac.ae/handle/1234/781
dc.language.none.fl_str_mv en
dc.publisher.none.fl_str_mv The British University in Dubai (BUiD)
dc.subject.none.fl_str_mv emotional intelligence
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv Raising Emotionally Intelligent Child
dc.type.none.fl_str_mv Dissertation
description The most famous model for testing the emotional intelligence of a child is “self-awareness, assertiveness, self-regard, self-actualization, independence, empathy, interpersonal relationships, social responsibility, problem-solving, reality testing, flexibility, stress management, stress tolerance, impulse control, happiness and optimism.” Therefore, parents, guardians and teachers should do more than showing concern and appreciation of the child’s activities and engage their emotions as well. We adopted a mixed methodology to gather and analyze data from 270 children with the permission and assistance of 8 teachers and atleast 270 parents. The teachers and parents were served with emotion logs and questionnaires to fill at the end of the week. Overall, 14 hypotheses were supported while others 1 was rejected. Our research shows that children with higher emotional intelligence are good at consoling themselves, overcome challenges faster, are healthier, attentive, are very sociable and perform well in academic endeavors. As discussed in this study, the best way for raising an emotionally intelligent child is emotional coaching which above all covers empathy as a powerful process of relating with their situations. This study concludes that emotional coaching is effective for children up teenage or adolescent ages. Emotional coaching should be a home philosophy and school policy. The parents, guardians and teachers should handle emotions as natural events. These caregivers must always listen to a child who is angry, moody, sad and showing all sorts of behaviour. This study concludes that the caregivers must establish a network of support where they communicate with each other about the children’s behaviour so that a standard handling procedure is in place. Often an angry child’s treatment at home is different from school and this causes all sorts of problems to their overall emotional intelligence. The caregivers need to explain to the child that it is okay to be angry but there are limits of behaviour that will be tolerated. Finally, whatever the action preferred by the caregivers, dismissing, disapproving and laissez-faire response to children’s behaviour must be avoided at all cost.
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spelling Raising Emotionally Intelligent ChildAl-Sudani, Marwa Salehemotional intelligenceThe most famous model for testing the emotional intelligence of a child is “self-awareness, assertiveness, self-regard, self-actualization, independence, empathy, interpersonal relationships, social responsibility, problem-solving, reality testing, flexibility, stress management, stress tolerance, impulse control, happiness and optimism.” Therefore, parents, guardians and teachers should do more than showing concern and appreciation of the child’s activities and engage their emotions as well. We adopted a mixed methodology to gather and analyze data from 270 children with the permission and assistance of 8 teachers and atleast 270 parents. The teachers and parents were served with emotion logs and questionnaires to fill at the end of the week. Overall, 14 hypotheses were supported while others 1 was rejected. Our research shows that children with higher emotional intelligence are good at consoling themselves, overcome challenges faster, are healthier, attentive, are very sociable and perform well in academic endeavors. As discussed in this study, the best way for raising an emotionally intelligent child is emotional coaching which above all covers empathy as a powerful process of relating with their situations. This study concludes that emotional coaching is effective for children up teenage or adolescent ages. Emotional coaching should be a home philosophy and school policy. The parents, guardians and teachers should handle emotions as natural events. These caregivers must always listen to a child who is angry, moody, sad and showing all sorts of behaviour. This study concludes that the caregivers must establish a network of support where they communicate with each other about the children’s behaviour so that a standard handling procedure is in place. Often an angry child’s treatment at home is different from school and this causes all sorts of problems to their overall emotional intelligence. The caregivers need to explain to the child that it is okay to be angry but there are limits of behaviour that will be tolerated. Finally, whatever the action preferred by the caregivers, dismissing, disapproving and laissez-faire response to children’s behaviour must be avoided at all cost.The British University in Dubai (BUiD)2015-12-22T07:58:01Z2015-12-22T07:58:01Z2015-03Dissertationapplication/pdf2013101057http://bspace.buid.ac.ae/handle/1234/781enoai:bspace.buid.ac.ae:1234/7812021-11-22T10:46:58Z
spellingShingle Raising Emotionally Intelligent Child
Al-Sudani, Marwa Saleh
emotional intelligence
title Raising Emotionally Intelligent Child
title_full Raising Emotionally Intelligent Child
title_fullStr Raising Emotionally Intelligent Child
title_full_unstemmed Raising Emotionally Intelligent Child
title_short Raising Emotionally Intelligent Child
title_sort Raising Emotionally Intelligent Child
topic emotional intelligence
url http://bspace.buid.ac.ae/handle/1234/781