During a quantitative study with a correlational design, a sample of 42 graduate and post baccalaureate students from a Mid-Atlantic region college accessed a digital survey that combined the Genos 360 EI Assessment-Concise Rater with the Inviting School Survey-Revised. Subsequent simple linear regression procedures found Emotional Self-Control [β = 0.486, t(74) = 2.016, p = 0.052] and Emotional Management of Others [β = 0.494, t(74) = 2.310, p = 0.027] predict a strong relationship in the positive direction between four of the five Inviting School Survey-Revised (ISSR) domains of school climate. By contrast, analysis of the Emotional Self-Awareness [β = - 0.172, t(74) = - 0.816, p = 0.420] results identified a strong relationship in the negative direction between all five ISS-R dimensions of school climate. Results affirmed previous research that indicated the leader’s overall emotional intelligence, rather than the leader’s self-awareness alone, influences the followers’ perception of an inviting work place. Implications suggest educational leaders seeking to improve school climate should develop their typically demonstrated emotional intelligence skills.
CITATION STYLE
Anderson, C. J. (2021). Examining Demonstrated Emotional Intelligence and Perceptions of Inviting Schools. Journal of Invitational Theory and Practice, 23, 35–61. https://doi.org/10.26522/jitp.v23i.3496
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