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Kise, Jane; Holm, Ann – Educational Leadership, 2021
Emotional intelligence involves recognizing and using one's own emotions well, and recognizing and working well with, or even influencing, the emotions of others. No one achieves emotional intelligence once and for all. Increasing emotional intelligence (EQ) is an ongoing process, and one's capacity can shift because of many factors such as levels…
Descriptors: Emotional Intelligence, Classroom Techniques, Psychological Patterns, Emotional Response
Tomlinson, Carol Ann; Sousa, David A. – Educational Leadership, 2020
In the last 50 years, research in psychology has informed educational practice, and recently educational neuroscience has also become a source of research-based guidance on education. The authors discuss four significant examples of how combining findings from psychology and neuroscience gives us insight into which approaches are most effective in…
Descriptors: Psychology, Neurosciences, Teaching Methods, Cognitive Structures
Brackett, Marc A. – Educational Leadership, 2018
When a school weaves social-emotional learning throughout its curriculum and culture--both helping students tune in to emotions and teaching "emotional skills" for handling difficult feelings--students and teachers thrive. Brackett discusses ways to develop the emotional intelligence of everyone in the school and lists five key emotion…
Descriptors: Social Development, Emotional Development, Emotional Intelligence, Charter Schools
Armstrong, Thomas – Educational Leadership, 2019
Three weeks after the February 14, 2018, shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, where 17 people were killed and 17 more injured, the Florida state legislature passed a bill, which among other things, designated two new roles for each school district: a director of safe schools and a mental health coordinator. These…
Descriptors: School Safety, Violence, Weapons, State Legislation
Aguilar, Elena – Educational Leadership, 2018
For teachers, emotional intelligence and emotional resilience are foundational qualities to thriving and staying in the profession. The author asserts that to retain more teachers, we must attend to each teacher's emotional resilience in preparation programs, in the hiring process, and in the ways we support teachers, especially novices.
Descriptors: Resilience (Psychology), Emotional Intelligence, Teacher Persistence, Faculty Mobility
Claxton, Guy; Costa, Arthur L.; Kallick, Bena – Educational Leadership, 2016
People use various terms to refer to traits and tendencies connected to social-emotional behavior and ways of thinking or approaching problems--from 21st century skills to mindsets to habits of mind. Such traits are also often called soft skills or non-cognitive skills. The authors contend that these latter terms imply that these traits and…
Descriptors: Personality Traits, Interpersonal Competence, Social Development, Emotional Intelligence
Brackett , Marc A.; Simmons, Dena – Educational Leadership, 2015
When students chronically misbehave and act disengaged in school, how do we know what they're really feeling? In this article, Marc A. Brackett and Dena Simmons of the Yale Center for Emotional Intelligence describe how understanding the science of emotions can help both students and teachers take charge of their emotions to achieve their goals.…
Descriptors: Student Behavior, Behavior Problems, Emotional Response, Emotional Intelligence
Goodwin, Bryan; Hein, Heather – Educational Leadership, 2016
U.S. high school graduation rates have risen steadily for the past decade, hitting an all-time high of 82 percent in 2013-14 (Rich, 2015). Yet there's a dark cloud behind this silver lining. According to the most recent data from the U.S. Department of Education (2015), only 59 percent of students who enter four-year colleges complete their…
Descriptors: High School Graduates, Graduation Rate, Time to Degree, College Graduates
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Steele, Carol Frederick – Educational Leadership, 2011
In terms of teacher quality, Steele believes the best teachers have reached a stage she terms inspired, and that teachers move progressively through the stages of unaware, aware, and capable until the most reflective teachers finally reach the inspired level. Inspired teachers have a wide repertoire of teaching and class management techniques and…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Teacher Effectiveness, Individual Characteristics, Individualized Instruction
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Tomlinson, Carol Ann – Educational Leadership, 2008
Noted educator Carol Ann Tomlinson shares the insights that shaped her thinking about informative assessment. Informative assessment goes beyond tests and the grade book. It means assessing students both formally and informally in multiple ways and giving frequent, productive feedback on student work. Informative assessment isn't separate from…
Descriptors: Student Evaluation, Student Interests, Feedback (Response), Teacher Student Relationship
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Goleman, Daniel – Educational Leadership, 2006
An essential task of school leadership is helping bring students and faculty into the state that will facilitate their working at their best. Positive emotional states help a brain learn efficiently, whereas excess stress and negative emotions shrink the brain's capacity to learn. Goleman describes new findings in neuroscience that reveal how…
Descriptors: Neuropsychology, Administrators, Affective Behavior, Emotional Intelligence
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Pool, Carolyn R. – Educational Leadership, 1997
Daniel Goleman, author of the bestseller "Emotional Intelligence," spoke at the Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development annual conference about children's declining emotional health indicators. He noted that emotional well-being predicts success in academic achievement, employment, marriage, and physical health; and that…
Descriptors: Definitions, Elementary Secondary Education, Emotional Development, Emotional Intelligence
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Cherniss, Cary – Educational Leadership, 1998
To succeed, educational leaders must be able to forge working relationships with many people and be mediators and mentors, negotiators and networkers. Administrators must be self-confident, be able to modulate emotions, be unusually persuasive, cultivate positive relationships, and continually develop their emotional intelligence. The right kind…
Descriptors: Administrator Effectiveness, Educational Administration, Elementary Secondary Education, Emotional Development
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Cobb, Casey D.; Mayer, John D. – Educational Leadership, 2000
Educational practices involving emotional intelligence should be based on solid research, not sensationalistic claims. There are two emotional-intelligence models based on ability and an ability/social-competence mixture. Emphasizing cooperative behavior could stifle creativity, healthy skepticism, or spontaneity. Teaching emotional reasoning pays…
Descriptors: Ability, Curriculum, Educational Practices, Elementary Secondary Education
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Pasi, Raymond J. – Educational Leadership, 1997
At a private high school in Providence, Rhode Island, students benefit from Big Brother and Sister programs, peer mediation, and lessons in emotional intelligence across the curriculum. These activities are part of a comprehensive social and emotional education program called "Success for Life." For nearly 20 years, seniors have been…
Descriptors: Curriculum, Emotional Development, Emotional Intelligence, High Schools
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