TY - JOUR AU - Coronado-Maldonado, Isabel AU - Díaz-Muñoz, Rocío AU - González-Sodis, José Luis PY - 2023/02/24 Y2 - 2024/03/28 TI - Emotional intelligence: A study of the TEIQue-SF applied to potential leaders in the university environment JF - Revista de Estudios Andaluces JA - REA VL - IS - 45 SE - Summary of the Articles DO - UR - https://revistascientificas.us.es/index.php/REA/article/view/23170 SP - 232-234 AB - <p align="justify">Emotional intelligence is becoming more and more relevant in a multitude of fields, including business. This current prominence has led different currents of work to suggest that emotional intelligence is an important factor for effective leadership in organisations.</p><p align="justify">Our study focused on the analysis of the emotional intelligence of university students for two reasons: on the one hand, the task of leadership is a complex task, both because of the functions developed in themselves, and because of the skills and requirements needed. On the other hand, university students, particularly those related to management studies, may potentially be involved in future selection processes for positions of responsibility.</p><p align="justify">The process carried out to find out the degree of such intelligence, to predict their leadership abilities and their possibilities of adapting to relevant roles, has been instrumented through an adaptation of the Petrides Self-Report questionnaire in its short form. Similarly, we sought to identify the main dimensions that make up emotional intelligence, based on an initial research proposal by the aforementioned author.</p><p align="justify">The results found regarding the self-assessment of university students show a very small standard error of the mean, meaning that the responses collected are fairly accurate with respect to reality. Therefore, in conclusion, in the questions posed regarding self-assessment of competences and emotional intelligence to assume positions of responsibility, it can be affirmed that the students show a medium-high level of EI. This reflects a clear tendency to offer a high level of self-assessment, showing a significant level of self-confidence and security. In addition, among the final considerations, different possible lines of future research have been suggested, seeking alternatives to implement measures to mitigate the subjectivity in the assessments, through the questionnaires themselves or the design of the questions, or proposing to design new teaching methodologies to develop the dimensions of students’ emotional intelligence identified through this study.</p> ER -