Students’ Communicative Inclinations as an Element of Assessment of their Emotional Intelligence in Terms of Education for Sustainable Development
(Pages 59-68)Iryna Koshkalda1,*, Nataliia Savytska2, Nataliia Kashchena3, Olena Dombrovska4, Iryna Nesterenko5 and Viktoria Surkova6
¹Department of Land Management, Geodesy and Cadastre State Biotechnological University, St. Alchevsky 44, Kharkiv, 61002, Ukraine..
²Department of Marketing, Raputation and Customer Experience Management State Biotechnological University, St. Alchevsky 44, Kharkiv, 61002, Ukraine..
³Department of Accounting, Audit and Taxation State Biotechnological University, St. Alchevsky 44, Kharkiv, 61002, Ukraine..
⁴Department of Land Management, Geodesy and Cadastre State Biotechnological University, St. Alchevsky 44, Kharkiv, 61002, Ukraine..
⁵Department of Accounting, Audit and Taxation State Biotechnological University, St. Alchevsky 44, Kharkiv, 61002, Ukraine..
⁶Department of Land Management, Geodesy and Cadastre State Biotechnological University, St. Alchevsky 44, Kharkiv, 61002, Ukraine.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.55365/1923.x2024.22.7
Abstract:
Education for sustainable development encompasses environmental, economic, and social issues, emphasizing security and value formation. Emotional intelligence (EI) garners attention across scientific disciplines, exploring its developmental specifics, professional implications, and impact on success and personality. Applied research probes EI's connections to life domains like work, leadership, and happiness, vital during adolescence for emotional and communicative growth. This article reports theoretical and empirical findings on students' emotional intelligence across communication skill levels. Methodologically, sustainable education employs dialogics, active learning, and transversal competency building. Theoretical analysis and synthesis complement empirical psychodiagnostic testing using N. Hall's "Questionnaire of Emotional Intelligence," "KOI-2" (by V. Fedoroshin), and statistical analyses. Empirical data reveal most students with low to moderate emotional intelligence, correlating with communication skills. Higher EI correlates with better sociability, positivity, and resilience to negativity. Given low EI and communication skill levels in some students, interventions to enhance emotional awareness are recommended.
Keywords:
Emotional Intelligence, Emotion Management, Emotion Recognition, Emotional Awareness, Communication Skills, Sustainable Development.
JEL Codes:
D91, J24, M12.
How to Cite:
Iryna Koshkalda, Nataliia Savytska, Nataliia Kashchena, Olena Dombrovska, Iryna Nesterenko and Viktoria Surkova. Students’ Communicative Inclinations as an Element of Assessment of their Emotional Intelligence in Terms of Education for Sustainable Development. [ref]: vol.22.2024. available at: https://refpress.org/ref-vol22-a7/
Licensee REF Press This is an open access article licensed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/) which permits unrestricted, non-commercial use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the work is properly cited.