An empirical examination of the role of emotional knowledge in the teaching profession
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
EDUCATION ASSOC SOUTH AFRICA
Materia
Emotional intelligence Initial training Knowledge Teachers
Fecha
2020Referencia bibliográfica
Riveiro-Villodres, L. E., Blanco-Encomienda, F. J., & Latorre-Medina, M. J. (2020). An empirical examination of the role of emotional knowledge in the teaching profession. South African Journal of Education, 40, s1-s11. [DOI: 10.15700/saje.v40ns2a1739]
Patrocinador
Faculty of Education, Economy and Technology of CeutaResumen
Modern society has plunged us into a maelstrom of telematics information with little control. Teachers from any field must be
trained in order to pass on the confidence and values to withstand this media pressure to their students. To this end, one of the
areas of knowledge on which greater emphasis should be placed is that related to emotional intelligence. The study reported
on here focused on this type of knowledge among professional music studies teachers in conservatories, asking what the
perception of this group on the aforementioned area of knowledge is and to what extent it has been received during their initial
training. For this investigation we used a quantitative methodological approach, and via descriptive analysis, a non-parametric
Wilcoxon signed-rank test, and inferential analysis, we found significant differences regarding the two scales considered: level
of agreement and emotional intelligence training received. Furthermore, regarding the descriptive variables, significant
differences were also found through the application of the Mann-Whitney U and Kruskal-Wallis test.