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NEW ZEALAND DEFENCE FORCE COMMAND AND STAFF COLLEGE Emotional Intelligence (EI) in the Military Curriculum By Ms Lily Wisker.

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Presentation on theme: "NEW ZEALAND DEFENCE FORCE COMMAND AND STAFF COLLEGE Emotional Intelligence (EI) in the Military Curriculum By Ms Lily Wisker."— Presentation transcript:

1 NEW ZEALAND DEFENCE FORCE COMMAND AND STAFF COLLEGE Emotional Intelligence (EI) in the Military Curriculum By Ms Lily Wisker

2 Concept of EI EI and Leadership Performance EI and Military Leadership Myth of EI EI in Military Curriculum Conclusion Questions Scope

3 Emotional Intelligence (EI) Theory Theory of EI –by Harvard Psychologist, Howard Gardner, 1983 Based on “Social Intelligence Concept” by Thordike, 1920 Developed from neuro-psychology and neuro-science - focuses on connection and circuitry in the brain that regulates emotions

4 Concepts of Emotional Intelligence (EI) Bar- On (1997) –An array of non-cognitive skills –Intrapersonal, interpersonal, adaptation, stress management, general mood Goleman (1995; 1998) –Competencies that develop through learning and increased with age and linked with maturity –Self-awareness, self-management, social awareness, social skills Mayer, Caruso & Salovey (1997; 2000; 2002) –A set of abilities –Perception, emotional facilitation, understanding and analysing emotion, regulation and management of emotion

5 EI and Leadership Effectiveness Positive association with managerial performance (Cote & Miners, 2007; Dulewicz, Young & Dulewicz, 2005; Semadar et al., 2006) Better predictor of success than general intelligence, IQ (Goleman, 998; Pellitteri, 2002) Ability to exercise self-control ( Barling, et al., 2000) Encourage creative and innovative thinking (Isen, et al., 1987) Ability to inspire and motivate morale of subordinates (George, 2000)

6 EI and Military Leadership EI too “soft, civilian and wimpy image” – mistaken perception (Abrahams, 2007) “Leadership is about INFLUENCING” people (FM22- 100, 1999, p. 4-6) Success of operations depends more on morale of people than on material advantages (NZDDP –D, 2004, p. 6-12) Conceptual link between EI and transformational leadership – military context (Livingstone, et al., 2002)

7 Myth of EI Elusive and vague concept (Davies, et al., 1998) More myth than science (Matthew, 2002) Concepts and measures are not coherent –Bar –On, 1997 –Goleman, 1995; 1998 –Mayer, Caruso & Salovey, 1997; 2000; 2002 Association of EI and leadership effectiveness not consistent

8 EI in Military Curriculum EI Constructs –Has roots in social intelligence –Intrapersonal and interpersonal domains –Not personality traits –Develop with age EI does not work in isolation –Feed both EI and Cognitive Skills into curriculum What level of leadership needs EI? Developing EI –Short seminars and workshops –Intensive coaching –Relevant feedback –Personal development

9 Conclusion Emotional Intelligence and Military Curriculum An idea whose time has come However Be Cautious

10 Questions? Know the Other and Know Yourself: One Hundred Challenges without Danger; Know Not the Other and Yet Know Yourself: One Triumph for One Defeat; Know Not the Other and Know Not Yourself: Every Challenge is Certain a Peril; Sun Tzu, Art of War


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