Social Learning Through Emotional Intelligence
Written by: Dr. Gandham Sri Rama Krishna
Published in International Journal of
Management, Marketing and HRD, Westwind
Publishing House, Mumbai, January, 2015, Vol.1, Issue.10, PP.14-20,
ISSN:2321-8622.
Abstract
In social
learning and clinical psychology, the effect of behaviour has an impact on the
motivation of people to engage in a specific behaviour. People wish to avoid negative
consequences, while desiring positive results or effects. If one expects a positive
outcome from a behaviour or thinks there is a highly probability of a positive
outcome, then there will be more likely to engage in that behaviour. The behaviour
is reinforced, with positive outcomes, leading a person to repeat the behaviour.
Social learning suggests that a combination of environmental and psychological
factors influence behaviour. On the other hand, an emotional intelligence is
the area of cognitive ability involving traits and social skills that
facilitate interpersonal behaviour. Intelligence can be broadly defined as the
capacity for goal-oriented adaptive behaviour; Emotional intelligence focuses
on the aspects of intelligence that govern self-knowledge and social adaptations.
Individual skills at accurately gauging affective responses in others are usually
talented at choosing socially adaptive behaviours, in their response.
Key
words:
Social Emotional Learning, Clinical Psychology, Emotional Intelligence.
Introduction
Social
learning is learning that takes place at a wider scale than individual or group
learning, up to a societal scale, through social interaction between peers. It
may or may not lead to a change in attitudes and behaviour (Reed et.al, 2010). On
the other hand, social emotional learning (SEL) is a process for learning life
skills, including how to deal with oneself, others and relationships, and how
to work in an effective manner in dealing with oneself. Social emotional
learning helps in recognizing individual emotions and in managing those
feelings (http://casel.org).
Social
learning theory establishes that human behaviour is influenced and affected by
the individual behaviour and environment. Every person affects as well as gets affected
by this triadic relationship. The theory establishes that each individual
possesses the capacity to symbolize, develop self directed forethought and
learn from his/her and others individual experiences (Schunk and Pajares, 2002).
The self regulating system represents a process that is affected by interdependent relationship between behaviour,
personal experience and environment (Bandura, 2001). This relationship becomes
a triadic interrelation that influences motivation and self-beliefs.
The
self system is a part of self-regulatory system that each individual possess.
The self-regulatory system aids in the development of beliefs and behaviour
that will enable or discount actions. Various researches have shown that self
regulatory behaviour can account for academic achievement (Pajare, 1994). As a part
of this self-regulatory system, Bandura introduced the concept of self-
efficacy. He defines self-efficacy as an essential part of the human
functioning reciprocally motivating and perpetuating the individual’s behavior.
Bandura
(2001) explains the process of thought and action as regulated by a self system
that enables individuals to exercise control of their thoughts, feelings and
actions. Pajare (1994) describes the self system as one that “houses one’s cognitive
and affective structures and includes the ability to symbolize, learn from others,
plan alternative strategies, regulate one’s own behavior and engage in self-reflection”.
The self system is a self-regulatory sub-system that mediates the influences of
each of the triadic parts of individual’s behavior, thoughts, feelings and
motivation. Based on the results of the interactions between environment, personal
characteristics and beliefs, the individual’s likelihood of similar actions to
occur increases. Each person
affects his/her environment and is influenced by his/her actions. The thoughts
resulting from this interrelationship becomes a mediator between knowledge and behaviour.
Each person’s experience forms an important part in the development of self-regulation
(Bandura, 2001).
The
individual therefore accumulates perception about his or her performances that
influence his/her self-belief. Through this bi-directional reciprocal process,
the individual is in control of his thoughts, environment and behaviour. The
self system is composed of experiences and beliefs that each person forms from his/her
abilities. According to Bandura self-efficacy is the concept by which each
person’s experiences, abilities and thoughts merges into one road.
According
to Social Learning Theory, models are an important source for learning new
behaviours and for achieving behavioural change in institutionalized settings.
Social learning theory is derived from the work of Albert Bandura which proposed
that observational learning can occur in relation to 3 models.
·
Lives model – In this
model an actual person demonstrates the desired behaviour.
·
Verbal instruction – Here
an individual describes the desired behaviour in detail and instructs the
participant in how to engage in the behaviour.
·
Symbolic – In this modeling
occurs by means of the media, including movies, television, internet,
literature and radio. This type of modeling involves a real or factional
character demonstrating the behaviour.
An
important factor of Bandura’s social learning emphasises on reciprocal
determinism. This notion states that an individual’s behaviour is influenced by
the environment and characteristics of the person. In other words, a person’s
behaviour, environment and personal qualities all reciprocally influence each other.
Bandura proposed that the modeling process involves several steps:
·
Attention – In order to
learn something, an individual must pay attention to the features of the
modeled behaviour.
·
Retention – Humans need
the ability to remember details of the behaviour in order to learn and later
reproduce the behaviour.
·
Reproduction – In
reproducing behaviour, an individual must organize his or her responses in
accordance with the model behaviour. This ability can improve with practice.
·
Motivation – There must
be an incentive or motivation driving the individual’s reproduction of the behaviour.
Even if all of the above factors are present, the person will not engage in the
behaviour without motivation.
In social learning and clinical psychology,
Rotter (1954) suggests that the effect of behaviour has an impact on the
motivation of people to engage in that specific behaviour. People wish to avoid
negative consequences, while desiring positive results or effects. If one
expects a positive outcome from a behaviour or thinks there is a highly
probability of a positive outcome, then there will be more likely to engage in
that behaviour. The behaviour is reinforced, with positive outcomes, leading a
person to repeat the behaviour. This social learning theory suggests that
behaviour is influenced by these environmental factors or stimuli and not psychological
factors alone.
Albert
Bandura expanded on Rotter’s idea, as well as the earlier work of Miller and
Dollard. This theory incorporates aspects of behavioural and cognitive
learning. Behavioural learning assumes that people’s environment cause people
to behave in certain ways. Cognitive learning presumes that psychological
factors are important for influencing how individual behaves. Social learning
suggests that a combination of environmental and psychological factors
influence behaviour.
Emotional
Intelligence
Emotional
intelligence is the innate potential to feel, communicate recognize, remember,
describe, identify, learn from, manage, understand and explain emotions. (Laure,
2010). Emotional Intelligence is the area of cognitive ability involving traits
and social skills that facilitate interpersonal behaviour. Intelligence can be
broadly defined as the capacity for goal-oriented adaptive behaviour; Emotional
Intelligence focuses on the aspects of intelligence that govern self-knowledge
and social adaptations.
The
term first appeared in 1985, in Wayne Payne’s Doctoral thesis, “A study on Emotion:
Developing Emotional Intelligence”. Payne’s thesis centered on the idea that
society’s historical repression of emotion is the source of wide-scale problems
such as addiction, depression, illness, religious conflict, violence and war.
Goleman
(2001) describes emotional intelligence as “managing feelings so that they are
expressed appropriately and effectively, enabling people to work together
smoothly toward their common goals”. According to Goleman, the four major
skills that makeup emotional intelligence is; self-awareness, self-management,
social-awareness, and relationship management.
Psychologists
have identified a variety of intelligence over the years (Gardner,1998). Most
of these can be grouped into one of three clusters;
·
Abstract intelligence is
an ability to understand and manipulate verbal and mathematical symbols,
·
Concrete intelligence is
an ability to understand and manipulate objects.
·
Social intelligence is
an ability to understand and relate to people (Ruisel,1992).
The Conceptualization
of Emotional Intelligence:
Mental
processes include appraisal and expression of emotion in the self, which
suggest that people skilled in this process can recognize and so respond more
appropriately, to their own emotions. Such emotionally intelligent individuals can
better express these emotions to others. They also tend to be more talented at recognizing
others’ emotional reactions, thus produces empathic responses to them.
Individual skills at accurately gauging affective responses in others are usually
talented at choosing socially adaptive behaviours, in their response. Thus others
should see them as warm and genuine. In contrast, individuals who lack such
skills can often appear impolite or diffident.
Emotional
intelligent individuals are said to be particularly adept at regulating
emotion. This process is often used as a means to meet particular goals, as it
can lead to more adaptive mood states. In other words such emotionally
intelligent individuals may improve
their moods and moods of others’. As a result, they can even go far as
motivating others to achieve worthwhile objectives. Sometimes, however, these
skills are sometimes channelled anti-socially and are used to manipulate
others.
Finally,
emotional intelligence can be utilized in problem solving. Fred O Walumbwa (2011)
proposed that individuals tend to differ greatly in their ability to organize
their emotions, in order to solve problems. Both emotions and moods have a
subtle influence over the strategies involved in problem solving. They come to
the conclusion that positive mood enables a greater degree of flexibility in
future planning, which enables better preparation for making the most of future
opportunities; similarly they claimed that a good mood is beneficial in
creative thinking, as it increases an individual’s ability for developing
category organizing principles. Unfortunately, the reverse of these abilities
have a tendency to hold true for individuals in negative moods.
Moods
may also be used to motivate one in the face of a challenge. Some people can
positively channel their anxiety experienced in situations, such as exams,
while others may imagine the possibility of failure, to better motivate themselves.
In general, individuals with an optimistic attitude towards life construct
interpersonal experiences, which result in improved outcome for themselves and
those around them. All in all it can be said that emotionally intelligent
individuals will be at an advantage in adaptively solving problems that are encountered
in life.
Bhagavad Gita quotes “Do your duty,
It is not your duty to think of its result.”
Emotional Control
In
psychology, the word emotion stands for a state of excitement in an organism.
Emotion is derived from the Latin word ‘movere’ which means to stir up, to
agitate or to excite. Emotions in general include happiness, surprise, love, fondness,
affection, faith, compassion, devotion, anxiety, jealousy, rage, fear, hatred,
horror, humiliation, apathy etc.
Emotions
play an important role in life and contribute to the personal and social
development of an individual. Continuous emotional disturbance affects the individual’s
growth and development and gives rise to mental, physical, social and other
problems. It hampers intellectual training. On the other hand, an emotionally stable
individual leads a happy, healthy and peaceful life. He is at ease with himself,
his surroundings and other fellow beings. Therefore, the development of emotions
is extremely important for the harmonious development of the personality of an
individual. Emotions influence all the aspects of an individual’s personality.
Proper training and education will go a long way to enable the young people to
control their emotions and obtain mental balance and stability. Emotions are
the prime motive forces of thought and conduct and their control is very important.
It has been rightly said, “To keep one’s emotions under control and be able to
conceal them is considered a mark of strong character.
Emotions
are the basic facets of individual since the expressions of feelings are vital
as well as indispensable. Expression of emotions can be considered as the most
fundamental need which is quite similar to the need for food, water or sleep. Emotions
are aggregations of the personal subjective experiences and individual behaviour.
Emotions play a significant role in guiding and directing our behaviour. Many times
they seem to dominate us in such a way that we have no solution other than behaving
as they want us to. Charles G. Morris stated “emotion is a complex affective
experience that involves diffuse physical changes and can be expressed overtly
in characteristic behaviour patterns”.
·
Emotional symptoms:
These are persistent anxiety, intense conflicts and tensions, fear, hatred,
jealousy, anger, inferiority complex, extreme timidity, temper-tantrum and
excessive worry.
·
Signs of emotions:
Emotions may be external or physiological and internal or psychological.
Important signs of emotions in an individual are: increase in heart rate, rise
in blood pressure, occurrence of changes in blood composition, increase in
respiration, hair standing on end, dilution of eye pupil, increase in muscle
tension, and increase in perspiration etc.
·
Emotional tolerance:
Frustration, fear, jealousy, and envy-these are the four unpleasant emotions
which everyone will inevitable face and must learn to tolerate.
·
Emotional expressions:
How the person expressions his emotions affects his personality both directly
and indirectly. The direct effect comes from the ability to emotional
expression to clear the system of the excess energy aroused to meet the
situation that stimulated the emotions. Indirect emotional expression affect
the personality pattern by influencing the judgments others make of the person.
·
Emotional balance:
In which the pleasant emotions outweigh the unpleasant, is essential to good
personal and social adjustment and to happiness.
·
Emotional catharsis:
Most individuals learn to repress the overt expressions of emotions that would
lead to unfavourable social judgments. It is recognized that successful purging
of the mind and body of pent-up emotional energy requires both physical and
mental catharsis.
·
Emotional stress:
Emotional stress is a generalized state of heightened emotionally which
eventually becomes habitual.
·
Emotional climate:
The emotional climate of the home directly influences the person’s
characteristic pattern of behaviour and his characteristic adjustment to life.
If the home climate is favourable, the individual will react to personal
problems and frustration in a calm, cooperative way. If the home climate is
frictional, he will develop the habit of reacting to family members and
outsiders as well as a hostile or antagonistic way. While the emotional climate
of the school has a strong influence on personality.
·
Emotional bank account:
Deposits are smile, calling by a person his/her name and remember the names,
listening, compassion, and appreciation. Withdrawals are, not criticizing others
directly or indirectly and not blaming
others. Therefore you always can take the interest on deposits in your account
by withdrawing unnecessary emotions and criticizes.
·
Affective Events Theory
(AET): It demonstrates that employees react emotionally
to things that happen to them at work and this influences their job performance
and satisfaction.
·
Get rid of emotional
stress: Dr. John A. Schindler has suggested the following
practical aids for doing so: (I) Practical thought control. (ii). Turn every
defeat into a moral victory (iii). When the things going are good and smooth, allow
yourself the delightful feeling of being happy. (iv) Avoid the felling of misfortune
through your mind which is like a repeating phonograph record.
Emotions
can be categorized into two kinds – positive and negative emotions. Emotions
like love, affection, fondness, faith, devotion, compassion, amusement,
curiosity, happiness and joy which are very helpful and essential to the normal
behaviour are termed as positive emotions. Whereas, unpleasant emotions like anger,
fear, rage, hatred, horror, anxiety and jealousy which are harmful to the individual’s
development are termed as negative emotions.
Napoleon Hill observers,
“Positive and negative emotions cannot occupy the
mind
at the same time. One or the other must dominate.”
It
should be borne in mind that it is not to assume that all the positive emotions
are always good and the negative emotions are bad. Excess of anything is bad.
Whether an emotion will prove to be helpful or harmful to an individual depends
upon the frequency and intensity of emotional experience. Emotions with too
much intensity and frequency whether positive or negative bring harmful effects.
In
emotional capabilities, no one is inferior to anyone. Once again it all depends
on what sort of expectations you have for yourself. If you expect to be
depressed, anxious, afraid, angry, then you will make these conditions regular
parts of your life. You are what you choose to be yourself, and if you stop
expecting emotional upset and instability, you will begin to take on the traits
of a fully functioning personality.
Conclusion
The
article highlights all about emotions, emotional intelligence and how they
influence the social learning. Social learning to a large extent depends on a
combination of environmental and psychological factors. So learning about
emotions, emotional intelligence, their effects and how to control them helps
in improving our personality as well as social adaptability. There is a saying
that “He who can manage himself can manage anything”. Managing oneself is
nothing but managing the feeling and having a control over them. And here
feelings are nothing but the emotions both negative and positive which
influence a person’s behaviour. Here the emotional intelligence which focuses
on the aspects of intelligence that govern self-knowledge and social
adaptability is very much useful in adaptive problem solving that is
encountered in life.
As
emotions are inevitable and unavoidable in humans, there is a need for all
humans to know about emotional intelligence which helps them in social learning,
managing their emotions, inculcating adaptability which leads to a happy and
peaceful life.
Reference
1. Albert
Bandura(2001), Social Cognitive Theory: An Agential Perspective, Annual Review
of Psychology, 52(1): 1-26.
2. Ch.
Maheswari Rambai, Dr.Gandham Sri Rama Krishna, Dr. N.G.S.Prasad (2013),“Occupational
Stress and Self-efficacy in Private Sector" was published by the LAP
Lambert Publishing House, Germany. ISBN: 978-3-8465-8557-3.
3. Charles
G. Morris and Albert A. Maists (2013),Understanding Psychology, Pearson
Publishers.
4. Dr. Gandham
Sri Rama Krishna(2012),“Efficacy and Self-Efficacy” published in the journal of
HRD Times, Chennai, July, 2012, Vol. 14,
No.7, PP. 20-21. ISSN: 0976-7401.
5. Fred
O. Walumbwa et.al (2011), Lining Ethical Leadership to Employee Performance.
The Role of Leader-Member Exchange, Self-efficacy and Organisational
Identification, Organisatinal Behaviour and Human Decision Process, 115,
Issue.2, PP.204-213.
6. Goleman,
Daniel (2001), An E1-Based Theory of Performance. The Emotionally Intelligent
Workplace, Chicago, PP. 27-44.
7. Laure
C. Hein (2010), Preparative Therapy: The Adolescent, the Psych Nurse, and the
Issues. Journal of Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Nursing, February, Vol.23,
Issue.1 PP.29-35.
8. Pajare
F. Miller M.D (1994), The Role of Self-efficacy and Self-concept Beliefs in
Mathematical Problem Solving: A Path Analysis, Journal of Educational
Psychology, 86, PP. 93-103.
10.
Ruisel I (1992), Social Intelligence:
Conception and Methodological Problems, Studies Psychological, 34(4-5), PP.
281-296.
11.
Schunk D.H and Pajare F (2002), The
Development of academic self-efficacy, Development of Achievement Motivation,
San Diego: Academic Press.
12.
Wayne Payne (2008), Demographic
Characteristics and emotional intelligence among workers in some selected
organizations in Oye State, Nigeria, Vision: The Journal of Business
Perspective January, Vol.12, and No. 43- 48.
13.
http://casel.org
Merit Casino - Review, Ratings & Games - Depados
ReplyDeleteIs the Merit Casino scam or legit? ➤ Read 메리트카지노 detailed customer review ✚ Grab 바카라 사이트 the ⭐ Trusted 1xbet rating ✚ Grab a bonus ✚ Grab a free bonus