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Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Is Emotional Intelligence Real?

This article by Po Bronson was posted on Sept. 27th in the Adult Development group at Yahoo. As much as I like Dan Goleman's work, and I think he is on the right track, there needs to be a LOT more research that is empirically sound before we can really understand what EI (or EQ) might be and how it works.

It must be noted, however, that any expectation of a correlation between EI and academic performance is misplaced at best - two different developmental lines, i.e., apples and oranges.

There clearly needs to be more a precise definition of exactly what, if anything, emotional intelligence is - because it surely isn't purely cognitive.

You can also read a discussion of this article here.

Is 'Emotional Intelligence' Real?

Monday, September 21, 2009 8:28 AM
By Po Bronson

As we noted in NurtureShock, emotional intelligence is having a family feud. The field is commonly described as having its commercial wing and its academic wing; on the commercial side is bestselling author Daniel Goleman, and on the academic side are scholars like the Yale dean Peter Salovey, whose team conceptualized one of the first theoretical models of emotional intelligence. A year ago, Salovey publicly slammed Goleman at the American Psychological Association conference for making unrealistic and misleading promises about EI. Salovey said the research data on EI do not yet support Goleman’s hype.

In my last post, I noted that new and better apples-to-apples measurements of college freshman grades have shown the SAT is a better predictor of college success than most have reported. It's still terribly far from perfect, and there's no argument to judge children on SAT scores alone, but the SAT shouldn't be thrown out. Today we're looking at the other side of the coin - how well measureable emotional intelligence does in predicting college success. <>I found myself discussing this topic with a writer at my office, and she had an interesting reaction. “Who cares if emotional intelligence correlates with school success or not?” she noted. “That doesn’t matter. Because emotional intelligence is important to success in life after kids graduate.”

Well, I want to argue that this finding does matter, because it undermines the original theory.

Emotional intelligence was postulated to be an actual intelligence, on par with (or even superior to) other dimensions of intelligence, like abstract reasoning. Emotional intelligence wasn’t merely social skills ─ it was supposed to be manifest in the brain with cognitive components.

In the field of intelligence, it’s recognized that all valid dimensions of intelligence have at least moderate correlations to each other. Thus, according to the theory, emotional intelligence was expected to modestly correlate with traditional cognitive abilities. This still allowed some wiggle room for each individual person to have his or her relative strengths.

But as Mara and others have discovered, the correlation is so thin that the theory doesn’t hold water. Emotional intelligence may not be an “intelligence” after all, but rather just a fancy phrase for adept social skills.

Many schools ─ caught up in the hype ─ have mandated that emotional intelligence be taught in the classroom. But the hours at school are limited. Would you want your child’s school to cut back on math class so they can teach social skills?

As we note in the book, studies of prison inmates show they have high emotional intelligence. This suggests the possibility that scholars have poor measurement tools for this construct; perhaps if they got the tool right, it'd predict success better. But the MSCEIT and the EQ-i have been in development for over ten years; at some point, we have to demand emotional intelligence theory live up to its hype.

Personally, I don't doubt that having adept social skills matters to success, especially outside school. But I'm not sure those skills aren't just gained over time, as a grown-up, from dealing with lots of types of people. And I'm not sold they should be classified as an intelligence.

3 comments:

  1. It's interesting that this author chooses to classify emotional intelligence primarily as a skill for getting along with others.

    From a contemplative/meditative standpoint, one might classify emotional intelligence more as a skill for getting along with yourself -- including when you're interacting with others.

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  2. Karl,

    Bronson is a smart guy, but he is not a psychologist. I suspect he and Goleman are operating on different definitions.

    I agree with your position on the meditative standpoint, but it also applies to anyone seeking to be a better person - if you do not understand and are not in touch with your own feelings, you'll be projecting stuff all over the place.

    I think there is a huge difference between the emotional intelligence Goleman works with and the interpersonal intelligence Bronson is talking about.

    Peace,
    Bill

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  3. I would argue that adept social skills matter very much to success. If a person can't interact well with other people he or she is at a real disadvantage to someone who can. And what about job interviews? A certain amount of social adeptness is required in order to "sell yourself."

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