| Mark Parkinson - 2000 - 148 páginas
...personality psychology: emotional intelligence. This can be defined as 'the capacity for recognising our own feelings and those of others, for motivating...emotions well, in ourselves and in our relationships'. It is really to do with the notion that intelligence always needs to be accompanied by emotional competence... | |
| Bruce Peltier - 2001 - 300 páginas
...learn the component skills. Goleman defines emotional intelligence as follows (1998b, p. 317l: . . . the capacity for recognizing our own feelings and...for managing emotions well in ourselves and in our relationthips. He claims that his research demonstrates that emotional intelligence is twice as important... | |
| Charles C. Manz - 2002 - 167 páginas
...a past or potential failure that seems to be negatively affecting your thinking and emotions. List "Emotional Intelligence" refers to the capacity for...intelligence, the purely cognitive capacities measured by IQ. Many people who are book smart but lack emotional intelligence end up working for people who have lower... | |
| Frederick C. Militello, Michael D. Schwalberg - 2002 - 274 páginas
...students had done. Goleman describes emotional intelligence as follows: [T]he capacity for recognizing our feelings and those of others, for motivating ourselves,...intelligence, the purely cognitive capacities measured by IQ. Many people who are book smart but lack emotional intelligence end up working for people who have lower... | |
| John Howard Falk, Lynn Diane Dierking - 2002 - 212 páginas
...intelligence" in his best-selling book of the same name. What emotional intelligence is, says Goleman, "is the capacity for recognizing our own feelings and...emotions well in ourselves and in our relationships." Or, as Maurice Elias, Rutgers University psychology professor, puts it, "It's the set of abilities... | |
| Len Sperry - 2002 - 256 páginas
...andJohn Mayer. In his book Working with Emotional Intelligence, Goleman defmes emotional intelligence as "the capacity for recognizing our own feelings and...emotions well in ourselves and in our relationships" (p. 316i. Emotional intelligence — or EQ, as some call it— complements intellectual intelligence,... | |
| Charles Manz - 2003 - 255 páginas
...popularized the concept of emotional intelligence (EQ) in his best-selling book. 25 According to Goleman, emotional intelligence refers to the capacity for...intelligence, the purely cognitive capacities measured by IQ. 26 Research suggests that EQ is every bit as important as IQ (intelligence quotient) for determining... | |
| Salih Kusluvan - 2003 - 876 páginas
...emotional relationship between the leader and followers. Goleman has defined emotional intelligence as "the capacity for recognizing our own feelings and...emotions well in ourselves and in our relationships" Goleman (1998). Emotional intelligence (EQ) has five key components and these are: • Self-awareness.... | |
| Roy Bell - 2003 - 136 páginas
...it is even more true for people in Christian leadership. Coleman defines emotional intelligence as "the capacity for recognizing our own feelings and...emotions well in ourselves and in our relationships. "2S Assuming Christian convictions and beliefs along with Christian character, there could hardly be... | |
| Ashton Applewhite, Tripp Evans, Andrew Frothingham - 2003 - 552 páginas
...religion is the development of the right emotions. — Geoffrey Parsons • Emotional Intelligence is the capacity for recognizing our own feelings and...ourselves, and for managing emotions well in ourselves and others. — Daniel Goleman • As much as 80% of adult "success" comes from EQ. — Daniel Goleman... | |
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