Developing Emotional Intelligence (EI) Among Gifted Children* · Developing Emotional Intelligence...
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Developing Emotional Intelligence (EI)
Among Gifted Children*
Moshe Zeidner University of Haifa
*Invited address, “Creativity, Innovation and Giftedness Conference”,
Budapest, April 25th, 2017

Tentative Guidelines for
Development of an EI Training
Program for Gifted Students

Tentative EI-Training Program We now present ten broad guidelines for developing, implementing, and evaluating EI training programs for gifted students, stemming from:
Generic program planning and evaluation principles as applied to the development of emotional abilities in gifted students
Ideas culled from both the EI and giftedness literature.
In developing this program, we adopt an ability-based model of EI, stressing:
Input (emotion identification and perception)
Processing (emotion understanding and emotion assimilation)
Output (emotion management in self and others).

Some Working Tenets
• Giftedness does not carry with it any inherent risk for emotional problems – generally due to misfit with environment
• At the same time, social and emotional needs of gifted and talented students are frequently unrecognized, with negative consequences (Robinson, 2002) – Most health professional are not adequately
trained to recognize needs of gifted
– Few interventions based on comprehensive models of emotional development
• Failure to explicitly target affective components characteristic of gifted may compromise or prevent actualization of potential

Pre-Planning Stage
Program Guidelines
I. Assess
environmental
resources and
potential
support for an
EI program for
the gifted
Brief Description
• Program planners need to establish and assess
the resources in the school (or school district)
under consideration prior to program planning
• The assessment is needed to evaluate to what
degree the EI training program is congenial
with :
– Existing practice and culture of the
school/district
– Expectations of the administrators, school
principal, and teachers (stakeholders)
– Sschool’s readiness to implement the EI training
program.
• Needed resources (funding, personnel,
professional development, and venues for
conducting the training activities) also need to
be evaluated at this stage

Pre-Planning Stage
Program Guidelines
II. Conduct systematic
need assessment
among target
population
Brief Description
• Prior needs assessment research is
necessary as a prerequisite for program
planning
– To map out the kinds of emotional
abilities gifted students display
• EI training programs could
potentially focus on:
• Enhancing relatively strong
abilities of the gifted
• Strengthening relatively weak
abilities
• Developing new ones.

Program Planning and Implementation
Program Guidelines
III. Base intervention activities on a solid theory of EI
Brief Description
• Emotional intervention programs are most effective when grounded in sound psyco-educational theory (Zins et al., 2004).
• The specific model of EI undergirding the program should dictate:
– Goals assessed during program evaluation
– Specific emotional abilities targeted
– Relevant measures employed for need assessment and impact evaluation.
Different conceptualizations of EI would lead to different:
Intervention programs
Techniques
Measures
Outcomes

Program Planning and Implementation
Program Guidelines
III. Base development of intervention activities on a solid conceptualization of EI (continued)
Description
• Ability-based model of EI: fostering
such EI facets as:
– emotion identification
– expression of motions
– monitoring of emotions
– utilization of emotions in intellectual goals
– regulation and control of emotions
• Trait models: fostering abilities, such
as:
– empathy
– motivation
– integrity
– assertiveness.

Program Planning and Implementation
Program Guidelines
IV. Carefully specify program goals , objectives and behavioral outcomes
Brief Description
• EI training programs should be based on a coherent rationale for the specification of goals and objectives
• Vague or ambiguous program objectives are often phrased as abstract statements of desired outcomes
– (e.g. “provide talented students with emotional abilities to succeed in school and in life”)
• These need to be clarified and be broken down into specific components or abilities
– (e.g. “provide talented students with the ability to recognize emotions, express them effectively, understand their antecedents, and adaptively cope with them”).

Program Planning and Implementation
Program Guidelines
V. Translate program
goals and objectives
into specific
program activities
(Example: Objective--
training emotion
regulation strategies)
Brief Description
• Discuss different ways to regulate negative
emotions (e.g., arising from failure to achieve
academic goals) and the effectiveness of
different strategies
• Write about a positive emotional experience
you experienced with your peers in the gifted
classroom and identify strategies you used to
deal with that emotion, evaluating how
effective each strategy was.
• Describe a time when you experienced envy of
other gifted children in your class. What
triggered it? How did you handle the envy?
• Describe the effects a chosen emotion control
strategy had, and how the emotion could have
been managed more and less effectively.

Program Guidelines
VI. Assure
professional
development
of program
personnel
Brief Description
• Once program objectives and activities
are in place, important to assure
professional development of teaching
and program staff
• Essential to identify appropriate
dedicated and talented teachers, so that
they can fulfill their professional role in
implementing EI interventions for the
gifted
• Can be achieved via training workshops
and on-site consultation, essential for
successful program implementation.
Program Planning and Implementation

Program Planning and Implementation
Program Guidelines
VII. Fully blend
and integrate
the EI
program into
the routine
school
educational
curriculum
Brief Description
• EI training program should be designed to
integrate seamlessly into the school
curriculum
– Lessons on emotions and emotional
abilities ca nbe blended into all subject
areas
• Gifted students can learn how to :
– Harness aggressive emotions in gym class;
– How to handle stress or frustration in math
or science class;
– How to empathize with one another while
reading powerful literature or analyzing
fictional or historical persona.

Program Planning and Implementation
Program Guidelines
VIII. Provide
provisions for
practice, feedback,
and for
generalizing the
domain of
emotional skills
across different
classes of
behavioral
performance
Brief Description
• To become part of one’s socioemotional
arsenal, emotional skills require:
– Practice of what is learned
– Environmental feedback on one’s
performance
• Necessary to provide opportunities for
students to apply emotional skills, both in
and out of the classroom
• Homework exercises would be particularly
helpful in inculcating these skills at home,
in the schoolyard, and in the
neighborhood.

Program Planning and Implementation
Program Guidelines
IX. Interventions need to
consider special
attributes and needs
of gifted individuals
Brief Description
• Program should carefully assess
attributes of gifted population that might
impact on outcome:
• Potential risks
Specific psychological stressors
Low social self-concept
Poor peer relations and alienation
Alienation
Competitiveness
Socially proscribed perfectionism
• Protective factors and mechanisms High cognitive abilities
Exceptional problem-solving
High academic self-concept
Strivings for excellence and grit
–

Program Guidelines
X Interventions should
be accompanied by
systematic monitoring
of program process
and evaluation of
program outcomes
Brief Description
• A. Process evaluations:
• Assessimg the accurate delivery of program activities and measuring program intervention is crucial for program evaluation
• B. Impact evaluations:
• Evaluation seeks to link the goals and activities of the program to empirical evidence that programs are being carried out as planned and they have the desired effect
Program Evaluation

Program Can be Complemented with:
• Strengthening coping strategies (e.g., guided imagery, relaxation techniques)
• Role Playing and simulation
• Mentorship and positive role models
• Journal writing
• Reading and discussing self-help books
• Counseling
• Bibliotherapy and Cinematherapy (reading books and watching movies about gifted )—
– through vicarious identification with main characters, readers and viewers can try on new roles, experience feelings, and safely explore alternative solutions to conflicts

For those gifted students who evidence
troubling social, emotional or
interpersonal behaviors… • The EI construct offers a potentially
useful conceptual framework to assist in designing helpful therapeutic interventions.
• Future training programs might target selected vulnerabilities attributed to gifted students, such as: – Feeling alienated from typical children
– Maladaptive coping with stress
– Threats to academic self-concept associated with big-fish-little-pond effect(Zeidner & Schleyer, 1999)
• Only experience with EI program implementation and evaluation would serve to answer these questions.

Concluding Comments • Many of the currently employed EI programs are promising, but
few have been systematically modeled upon EI or designed in a way
that is likely to lead to long-term change.
• It remains uncertain which of the components of EI should be
emphasized and which are most malleable and responsive to
training.
• At this stage, we can only speculate that:
– whereas certain “source” personal dispositions may be difficult to
change (emotional stability, coping styles, etc.),
– it may be more possible to target “surface” emotional abilities
and behaviors (e.g. learning to manage emotions in stressful
encounters, understanding antecedents and consequences of
emotions).
• Thus, it is critical for psycho-educational researchers to continue to
establish evidence-based strategies that educators can effectively
implement, particularly for the gifted.