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Emotional Intelligence for Education in the Borderlands

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HumaNext COMMUNICATION IDEAS Christi Cruz Lina De LaGarza-Dougerty Vicky Lu Rick Hammett Darwin Nelson Terry Olberg Emotional Learning Systems Schedule & Discussion ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Emotional Intelligence for Education in the Borderlands


1
Emotional Intelligence for Education in the
Borderlands
Christi Cruz Lina De LaGarza-Dougerty Vicky
Lu Rick Hammett Darwin Nelson Terry Olberg
2
Schedule Discussion Items
Defining Emotional Intelligence
EI Student Motivation
EI Self Esteem
EI in Public Schools
EI for College Success
3
What is Emotional Intelligence?
Are people of equal IQ equally successful in life?
4
What is Emotional Intelligence?
Are people of equal IQ equally successful in life?
Salovey Mayer (1990)
  • Perceive, appraise, and express emotion
  • Access and generation feelings to facilitate
    cognition
  • Understand affect-laden information ... make
  • use of emotional knowledge
  • Regulate emotions to promote emotional
  • intellectual growth and well-being

Bar-On (1997)
  • Happiness Self-actualization

5
Defining EI for Education
Are students of equal IQ equally successful in
school?
Nelson Low (2003)
  • Accurate knowledge and value of self
  • Responsible behavior as a person of worth
    dignity
  • Variety of strong, healthy relationships
  • Work well with others
  • Productive reactions to demands pressures
  • of everyday life

6
EQ as Internal Dialogue
Beliefs Thoughts Values
Emotional or Behavioral Response
Activating Event
Source Nelson Low (2005). Doctoral Leadership
Seminar
7
EI Important Success Factor
EQ ? IQ
Emotional intelligence is the ability to think
constructively and act wisely in emotional
situations.
8
The Difference Between EQ IQ
9
Reframing Experiences?
10
Connect The Dots Using Four Straight Lines
11
Using Three Straight Lines?
12
Good Morning Mary ....
Emotion Sympathy Warmth
Emotion Puzzled about why
Thought Mary is Preoccupied
Behavior Maintains friendly, rewarding relationshi
p with Mary
Secondary Mental Reaction Maybe somethings
bother her
Constructive Sequence
Event Mary did not say Hello
Destructive Sequence
Thought Mary is a snob
Secondary Mental Reaction Mary thinks shes
better than me Ill show her what that feels
like!
Behavior Develops antagonistic relationship with
Mary
Emotion Anger
Emotion Increase in anger
Source Seymour Epstein (1998). Constructive
Thinking The Key to Emotional Intelligence
13
In Summary
EQ
Emotional intelligence is the ability to think
constructively and act wisely!
14
The Rio Bravo Association17th Annual Meeting
  • Ten Activities to Improve ESL Students'
    Self-esteem

15
Introduction
  • Stephen Krashens theory of L2 acquisition- the
    fifth hypothesis, the Affective Filter
    hypothesis.
  • Low motivation, low self-esteem, and
    debilitating anxiety can combine to raise the
    affective filter and form a mental block that
    prevents comprehensible input form being used for
    acquisition.

16
(No Transcript)
17
Strategies
  • CALLA approach Activities

Design self-collage
Ranking Traits
Write yourself a letter
Interview
Journal
Build up L2 acquisition and self-esteem
Drawing Self portrait
Create a Me Commercial
Accentuate the positive
Thumb Prints
Shared learning
18
Conclusion
  • A student enters school as a unique individual,
    molded by genes, environment, and a certain spark
    within himself. An increased awareness of how
    special that unique spark really makes him helps
    that student retain that quality.
  • My goal as a teacher is not to produce
    cookie-cutter children but to nourish each
    student's individual soul. As an ancient Chinese
    proverb says
  • I hear and I forgetI see and I rememberI
    doand I understand.

19
Emotional Intelligence InPublic Schools
Terry Olberg
20
Roles of the School Principal
21
Circles of Concern/Circle of Influence
Circle of Concern
The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People Steven
R. Covey
22
Effects of Poor Decision-Making in School
  • Effects of Poor Decision-Making in Schools and
    with School-Age Students
  • Poor grades
  • General disciplinary problems
  • Attendance problems
  • Poor relationships at school
  • Confrontations with authority figures
  • Substance abuse
  • Teenage pregnancy and/or marriage)
  • Joining gangs
  • Dropping out
  • Suicide

23
Hierarchy of Needs Abraham Maslow, 1943
Entering into emotional states (at will) to
achieve and be successful.
Act- ualization
Self-Esteem
Loving Caring
Safety Security
Physiological Needs
Maslows
24
Implications for Schools for Developing Emotional
Intelligence
  • Become schools which
  • Provide for physiological needs (free lunch
    health services)
  • Provide safe schools (bullying unhealthy
    surroundings)
  • Provide a caring school (caring, empathetic
    teachers counseling contact with safety net
    personnel social activities)
  • Teach character development activities
  • Teach consequences of actions (good discipline)

25
They Dont Care
They dont care what you know Until they know
you care.
Continuum of Teacher Caring Kindergarten
teachers love their students High school
teachers love their subjects College teachers
love themselves.
26
Generational Poverty
Generational poverty is described as being in
poverty for at least two generations. -- Ruby
Payne, A Framework for Understanding Poverty (4th
ed.), 1996
  • Characteristics of generational poverty which
    affect education
  • Low oral language tradition
  • Survival orientation academics usually not
    prized or discussed
  • Importance of non-verbal communication
  • Negative orientation leads to belittling for
    mistakes
  • Discipline is about punishment, not change
  • Belief in fate choice seldom considered
  • Polarized thought options rarely considered
  • Time is present there is no future
  • Lack of order and organization
  • Lives in the moment without consideration of
    future consequences
  • Are physically aggressive
  • Work based on liking a teacher
  • Dont know courtesies
  • Dislike authority and rules

Bottom Line Emotionally unintelligent
behavior With poor decision-making a result
27
Addressing Generational Poverty With Emotional
Intelligence
  • Provide safe, caring environment
  • Provide role models (personal or studied)
  • Establish opportunities for positive
    relationships
  • Provide mentors (school personnel or outsiders)
  • Teach rules of middle class society
  • Provide opportunities for oral language
    development (including discussion rather than
    action)
  • Teach students to be organized
  • Use discipline opportunities to help students
    change behavior (counseling rather than just
    punishment)
  • Provide goal-setting activities, both short-term
    and long-term (as career path development)

28
Addressing Generational Poverty With Emotional
Intelligence (continued)
  • Help build a positive out-of-school setting
  • Work for positive parental involvement
  • Provide parent training
  • Help parents deal with problems (social worker
    and contacts with community services)
  • Educate parents toward future goals for kids
    (including ways to get to college)
  • Provide training for teachers on working with
    parents from poverty (sensitivity training,
    cultural training, communications skills)
  • (As a MetLife study has shown that 20 of 1st
    -5th year teachers rank problems dealing with
    parents is their 1 problem than percentage
    jumps to 40 for teachers in schools where more
    than 50 of students are from low-income
    familiesand that will include students in
    generational poverty.)

29
Emotional Intelligence College Success
Christi Cruz
  • Strengthening Emotional Intelligence as the key
    to unlocking the door to student success

30
What is a Successful Student?
  • Successful students (Nelson Low 2003)
  • Are initiators
  • Are self motivators
  • Learn to control their impulses and delay
    gratification
  • Persevere and try to overcome personal
    difficulties
  • Effectively translate thought into action and do
    not procrastinate
  • Complete tasks
  • Willing to risk failure, accept responsibility,
    and reject self-pity
  • Independent and focused on meaningful goals
  • Balance their cognitive thinking with their
    emotional thinking
  • Self-confident and possess positive self-efficacy

31
South Texas Institutions The At Risk Student Body
  • Rural Students (35 of students from rural
    locations are poor)
  • Working Students (39 of students work at least a
    part-time job while attending college)
  • Minority Students (Hispanic population represents
    fastest growing racial/ethnic group)
  • Unprepared Students (70 students attending
    community colleges enter unprepared)
  • Low Socio-economic status (29 of students live
    in a household with an annual income below
    20,000)

32
Consequential Need for Integration
  • Evolving student body increased diversity in
    the student body lack of sense of belonging
    lack of motivation to continue increase number
    of students dropping out before completing degree

33
Creating Successful Students
  • Balance cognitive and emotional mind
  • Active listeners
  • Know and use their primary learning style
  • Utilize campus resources for improvement of
    reading and comprehension
  • Develop self-management (time-management) skills
  • Set personal goals (Drive Strength)
  • Organized, punctual, and dependable (Commitment
    Ethic and time Management)
  • Assertive with self, friends, and professors
    (Assertion)

34
Creating Successful Students cont
  • Effectively manage and express emotions (Stress
    Management)
  • Appreciate and value differences (Empathy and
    Positive Influence)
  • Focused on personal strengths (Self-Esteem)
  • Establish and maintain healthy relationships
    (Social Awareness and Decision Making)
  • Recognize and express emotions effectively (Anger
    and Anxiety Management)
  • Be flexible (Positive Change)
  • Nelson Low (2003) page 9.

35
Student Success
  • Identifying and strengthening Emotional
    Intelligence skills is crucial not only to
    student success in the classroom but also in
    retaining the student through graduation.

36
Is E.I. Relevant to Education and Student
Success?
  • Vela, Robert H. (2003)
  • Williams, Magdalena H. (2004)

37
Hispanic Students Academic Achievement
  • Vela (2003) studied 760 first year college
    students from a South Texas university to
    determine the affects of emotional intelligence
    on the academic success (measured by first
    semester GPA, SAT scores, gender, and ethnicity)
    of college freshmen.

38
Hispanic Students Academic Achievement
(continued)
  • Nelson Lows ten emotional intelligence skills
    were used as predictors of academic success while
    the criterion was student GPA (See Table 4.20).
  • Vela (2003) found time management, leadership,
    and commitment ethic, and stress management to be
    valid predictors of student GPA (accounting for
    8 variance in student achievement-See Table 4.16)

39
E.I. Correlations with Student Success GPA
Retention
  • Williams (2004) found significant correlations
    between
  • Drive Strength and Retention
  • Time Management and Retention
  • Commitment Ethic and Retention
  • Time Management and Student GPA
  • Commitment Ethic and Student GPA
  • See tables 4.21 and 4.27

40
Impacting Student Success in High School
  • Marky E. Smith (2004) used E.I. tools in her
    study of high school students.
  • Why do students drop out of high school?
  • 51 dont like school
  • 40 have failing grades
  • 35 have poor student-to-teacher relationships
    and communication
  • 31 inability to keep up with school work
  • E.I. would impact each of these areas

41
Impacting Student Success in High School
(continued)
  • The study consisted of
  • An experimental group, consisting of 20 students,
    who received treatment through a 10 week E.I.
    intervention program using Nelson and Lows
    Personal Responsibility Map (PRM).
  • A control group, consisting of 20 students, who
    took pre/post tests but attended regular classes
    minus the E.I. intervention program

42
Impacting Student Success in High School
(continued)
  • Smith (2004) found Emotional Intelligence to
    significantly impact change, growth, improvement,
    and development in the experimental group of high
    school students.

43
Lack of preparedness leads to Students Enrolled
in Remediation
  • Emotional Intelligence is a key factor in
    retaining developmental students and empowering
    them with the tools to succeed.

44
Developmental Students at a Glance and the
associated E.I. Skill
45
Suggested Implementation
  • Freshmen Orientation Course
  • Implementation into a course specific course
    either as Supplemental Instruction (SI) or as a
    course component.

46
References
  • Hurtado, S., Carter, D. F. (1997, October).
    Effects of college transition and perception of
    the campus racial climate on Latino students'
    sense of belonging. Sociology of Education, 70,
    324-345. Retrieved April 23, 2006, from JSTOR
    database.
  • Nelson, D. B., Low, G. R. (2003). Emotional
    Intelligence Achieving academic and career
    excellence. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey
    Pearson Education, Inc.
  • Smith, M. E. (2004, July 2004). A mixed paradigm
    Study of a transformational learning program for
    at-risk high school students (Doctoral
    dissertation, Texas AM University-Kingsville,
    July 2004). Retrieved April 26, 2006, from
    http//education.tamuk/eiconf/research_page.htm
  • Vela, R. H. (2003, December). The role of
    emotional intelligence in the academic
    achievement of first year college students
    (Doctoral dissertation, Texas AM University-
    Kingsville, 2003). Retrieved April 20, 2006, from
    http//education.tamuk/eiconf/research_page.htm
  • Williams, M. H. (2004, December 2004).
    Achievement and retention patterns in a
    predominantly Hispanic serving institution of
    higher education (Doctoral dissertation, Texas
    AM University-Kingsville, December 2004).
    Retrieved March 20, 2006, from http//education.ta
    muk/eiconf/research_page.htm
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