The relationship between ego identity status and emotional intelligence in high school students

The literatures have showed, identity diffusion had relation with decreasing well-being from emotional disabilities to psychopathology. The problem of this study was to investigate the relation between identity statuses and component of emotional intelligence. The aim of this research was to determi...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: abbas Rahiminezhad, Ensiyeh Enjedani
Format: Article
Language:fas
Published: Dr. Mahmoud Mansour publication 2016-08-01
Series:مجله علوم روانشناختی
Subjects:
Online Access:http://psychologicalscience.ir/article-1-205-en.html
Description
Summary:The literatures have showed, identity diffusion had relation with decreasing well-being from emotional disabilities to psychopathology. The problem of this study was to investigate the relation between identity statuses and component of emotional intelligence. The aim of this research was to determine the relationship of identity statuses, gender and age with emotional intelligence subscales. The research method is correlational research. For this purpose the number of 235 high school students was selected randomly from zone 3 and 17 of educational divisions. The instruments were Farsi translation of EOM-EIS-2 of Benion and Amads (1986) and Farsi version of emotional intelligence TMMS of Salovay and Mayer (1995). The questionnaires were carried out in the classes of selected high schools. At the first the stepwise regression analysis used for predicting subscales of emotional intelligence with predictors of ideological identity statuses, gender and age of students. Results showed: a) attention to emotion was predicted 8% by sex and 5% by ideological foreclosure; b) differentiation of emotion was predicted 6% by ideological achievement and 3% by sex. first, the interpersonal identity statuse had a stronger role in predicting emotional intelligence than ideological identity statuses. Second, the sex of students showed a considerable role in predicting emotional intelligence.
ISSN:1735-7462
2676-6639