1 / 32

“ All I Need to Know I Learned in Kindergarten ”

“ All I Need to Know I Learned in Kindergarten ”. Four of the five skills educators (NRC, 2000) emphasize for school readiness are socio-emotional: - mastery of educational building blocks - motivation to succeed in school - ability to get along & make friends

seth
Download Presentation

“ All I Need to Know I Learned in Kindergarten ”

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. “All I Need to Know I Learned in Kindergarten” Four of the five skills educators (NRC, 2000) emphasize for school readiness are socio-emotional: - mastery of educational building blocks - motivation to succeed in school - ability to get along & make friends - ability to function in a group - capacity to manage emotions

  2. In Essence Being intelligent about emotions means that we can perceive and use emotions to create optimal relationships and produce desired outcomes.

  3. Emotional Intelligence • Seen as the fundamental key to success and leadership - and it can be learned! • Working with people • Not just about being nice • Managing one’s own emotions • Ability to handle encounters • Teamwork • Leadership

  4. What is Emotional Intelligence? Emotional intelligence is not about being nice all the time. • It is about being honest. Emotional intelligence is not about being “touchy-feely.” • It is about being aware of your feelings, and those of others. Emotional intelligence is not about being emotional. • It is about being smart with your emotions.

  5. Emotional intelligence • It is different way of being smart • It includes knowing what your feelings are and using your feelings to make good decisions in life. • And it’s a social skill- getting along with other people, managing emotions in relationships, being able to persuade or lead others.

  6. Emotional Intelligence Emotional Intelligence is the ability of an individual to deal successfully with other people , to manage one’s self, motivate other people, understand one's own feelings and appropriately respond to the everyday environment

  7. It involves various skills • Self awareness • Managing emotions. • Motivation • Empathy • Social skills

  8. Can it be learnt at any age • The answer is yes • You can upgrade your skill at any stage of your life • In fact age and maturity are positively correlated with EQ • Emotional intelligence skills are making us effective in life challenges and useful for everybody. • Useful for everyone who want to be happy and effective in life.

  9. “We are being judged by a new yardstick; not just how smart we are, or by our training and expertise, but also how well we handle ourselves and each other.” Daniel Goleman, Ph.D. Working with Emotional Intelligence

  10. Emotional Intelligence • In Working with Emotional Intelligence, author Daniel Goleman defines EI in the workplace as the ability of employees to recognize: • Their own feelings • The feelings of others • What motivates them • How to manage their emotions, both in themselves and in relationships with others

  11. Remember! Emotional intelligence is not about being nice all the time. • It is about being honest. Emotional intelligence is not about being “touchy-feely.” • It is about being aware of your feelings, and those of others. Emotional intelligence is not about being emotional. • It is about being smart with your emotions.

  12. EQ is the distinguishing factor that help us to maintain a warm relationship or a distant contacts.

  13. Self-Awareness • Self-Regulation Relate to Ourselves • Self-Motivation • Empathy Relate to Others • Effective Relationships The Five Essential Competencies of Emotional Intelligence

  14. The "New Yardstick" • On how we handle ourselves and each other • Goes beyond intellectual ability and technical skills • Focuses on personal qualities such as initiative, empathy, adaptability, persuasiveness

  15. Simple Definition Ability to manage emotions in one’s self and in others in order to reach desired outcomes.

  16. Goleman’s Competencies Model

  17. 4 inter-related abilities Perceiving, Using, Understanding, and Managing emotions

  18. Understand Emotions • Recognizes what events are likely to trigger different emotions • Knows that emotions can combine to form complex blends of feelings • Realizes that emotions can progress over time and transition from one to another • Provides a rich emotional vocabulary for greater precision in describing feelings and blends of feelings

  19. What Does “Use Emotion” Entail? • The capacity to generate and feel an emotion in order to focus attention, reason, and communicate. • The capacity to use emotion to influence cognitive processes such as decision making, deductive reasoning, creativity, and problem solving.

  20. Manage Emotions • Stay open to feelings • Blend emotions with thinking • Reflectively monitor emotions

  21. “If we are in a heightened state of agitation or anger we cannot make good decisions, we cannot reason well.” Christine Casper Communication, Motivation & Management Inc.

  22. Practicing Self-Regulation: • Accept responsibility for choosing your own emotional responses. • Learn to “reframe” stressful situations into ones that are challenging. • Be aware of, and learn to manage, your own emotional“triggers.”

  23. Components of Emotional Intelligence

  24. “If people will stop for a moment and put themselves in another person’s shoes… it will help them modify their own behavior. It will help them develop relationships with those people.” Darryl Grigg, Ed.D. Co-Developer, American Express Emotional Competence Program

  25. "And so there's a real pay-off.  The people who will become the leaders, the people who will become the star performers, are the ones who have the strengths in the key emotional intelligence abilities." Daniel Goleman, Ph.D. Founder, Emotional Intelligence Services

  26. Practicing Empathy: • Empathy means recognizing, and responding appropriately to, the emotions of others. • By expressing empathy, you also create empathy in others. • Realize that emotions impact such measurable goals as • productivity and safety.

  27. How then can one improve emotional intelligence? • Pay attention to self and other’s body language • Listen more; speak less- develops empathy • Get curious, not furious- Watch what you say especially when frustrated or annoyed. Reframe negative emotions into curiosity - " ... this makes absolutely no sense to me" can be replaced with, "Do you see something in this that I must be missing” • Elicit pride in others – Reason for working together • Remember that emotions are contagious - A dominant person's emotions (negative or positive) always influences others. Leaders should be careful to show only those emotions, which they want to see in others

  28. Empathy

More Related