Emotional intelligence
The skills of communicating well and getting along with others are very important, and can be improved with practice.
On this page
- What is ’emotional intelligence’?
- How schools can help children develop EQ
- How parents can help children develop EQ
- Printable advice sheet
What is ’emotional intelligence'?
The set of skills involved in communication and relating to others can be called Emotional Intelligence (EQ). These skills include:
- knowing your own emotions
- recognising and being sensitive to other people’s emotions
- knowing how to calm down when you are upset or angry
- developing the skills of restraint - knowing when it is wise not to say or do something.
Developing emotional intelligence skills helps young people succeed. Study after study has found associations between high levels of EQ and success, for example:
- a major Asian bank found that EQ was a better predictor of workplace success of its employees than IQ
- in a study of USA Air Force recruits, EQ was the best predictor of success
- in a study of 286 organisations where job competencies of star performers at every level were analysed. The most powerful predictors were the EQ skills of awareness, self-regulation, self-motivation, empathy and social skills
- friendship skills also predict successful romantic relationships.
How schools can help children develop EQ
There are a number of programs that develop emotional intelligence in young people. These include Friends, The Heart Masters, You Can do It, Mind Matters, Kids Matter, and Bounce Back. Given the importance of these skills to long term success, it is important that schools make space in busy curriculums for these types of activities.
How parents can help children develop EQ
Identifying feelings
Parents are powerful teachers of EQ. You can help children to identify their own feelings by saying:
“You look a bit upset. Is that how you are feeling?” or “I wonder if you are feeling angry about that. What do you think?”
Young children can point to a series of faces drawn to show a continuum from happy to sad. Families sometimes use a variant of the ‘fire danger’ sign replacing the terms with feelings such as ‘happy’, ‘irritated’, ‘annoyed’, ‘angry’, ‘ballistic’.
Calming down
Helping children to learn how to calm down when they are upset is also a critical EQ skill.
Parents can help children to do this by learning to rate their level of upset from 0 (nothing) to 10 (out of control) and to then start to talk (at a time when they are NOT angry) about ways to help them to calm down. This often differs for each child. Some need space and time alone whereas others if left alone become dangerous. Some need quiet time and others need to move and let off steam.
Reading other people’s emotions
The third skill parents can help children to learn is to tune into and read other people’s emotions. This can involve playing guessing games with children such as:
“What do you think that person is feeling?”, ‘What sort of day do you think that person has had?”, or “What mood do you think that person is in?”
This can be good fun for children as it combines the ideas of guessing and spying with noticing the feelings of others. It is also helpful to have children learn how to read facial expressions so asking similar questions using photos of faces in magazines, newspapers and on television shows. As children become more skilled you can play the same sorts of games using only the eyes.
Being able to read the emotions conveyed by eyes gives young people a high level of skill in this area. The easiest way to do this is to take pictures of people’s faces from magazines and use other pieces of paper to mask everything but the eyes (so it looks a bit like Ned Kelly’s helmet) and ask children similar questions. Then show them a bit more of the face and ask again. It is amazing how quickly children get skilled at this.
Predicting other people’s actions
Predicting the next actions of people is also useful. Parents can help children develop this by pausing or freeze framing DVDs and asking children to try to guess what the characters will do next.
Printable advice sheet
To download a copy of this advice sheet, see:
Updated 26 March 2026
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