Emotional intelligence and career decision-making difficulties: the mediating role of career decision self-efficacy

Emotions and confidence are said to play an important role in the career decision-making process. The present study, comprising 472 students attending a large university in the United Kingdom, advances current thinking in this area in two ways. First, by identifying specific emotional intelligence (...

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Main Authors: Santos, Angeli, Wang, Weiwei, Lewis, Jenny
Format: Article
Published: Elsevier 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/51354/
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author Santos, Angeli
Wang, Weiwei
Lewis, Jenny
author_facet Santos, Angeli
Wang, Weiwei
Lewis, Jenny
author_sort Santos, Angeli
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Emotions and confidence are said to play an important role in the career decision-making process. The present study, comprising 472 students attending a large university in the United Kingdom, advances current thinking in this area in two ways. First, by identifying specific emotional intelligence (EI) abilities that are key to decision making, and second, by exploring the role of career decision self-efficacy (CDSE) as a potential mediator in the relationship between EI and career decision-making difficulties (CDD). Regression and mediation analyses indicated that EI was negatively related to CDD and that effects were strongest for self-emotion appraisal. EI was also positively related to CDSE, with use of emotion eliciting the strongest effect. Career decision self-efficacy was largely found to mediate the relationship between overall and specific abilities of EI and CDD, with full mediation effects observed for self-emotion appraisal and use of emotion and various difficulties. The findings and limitations are discussed with reference to the literature together with practical implications for career counseling and suggestions for future research.
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spelling nottingham-513542020-05-04T19:48:58Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/51354/ Emotional intelligence and career decision-making difficulties: the mediating role of career decision self-efficacy Santos, Angeli Wang, Weiwei Lewis, Jenny Emotions and confidence are said to play an important role in the career decision-making process. The present study, comprising 472 students attending a large university in the United Kingdom, advances current thinking in this area in two ways. First, by identifying specific emotional intelligence (EI) abilities that are key to decision making, and second, by exploring the role of career decision self-efficacy (CDSE) as a potential mediator in the relationship between EI and career decision-making difficulties (CDD). Regression and mediation analyses indicated that EI was negatively related to CDD and that effects were strongest for self-emotion appraisal. EI was also positively related to CDSE, with use of emotion eliciting the strongest effect. Career decision self-efficacy was largely found to mediate the relationship between overall and specific abilities of EI and CDD, with full mediation effects observed for self-emotion appraisal and use of emotion and various difficulties. The findings and limitations are discussed with reference to the literature together with practical implications for career counseling and suggestions for future research. Elsevier 2018-08-31 Article PeerReviewed Santos, Angeli, Wang, Weiwei and Lewis, Jenny (2018) Emotional intelligence and career decision-making difficulties: the mediating role of career decision self-efficacy. Journal of Vocational Behavior, 107 . pp. 295-309. ISSN 0001-8791 emotional intelligence; career decision self-efficacy; career decision-making difficulties; university students; mediation https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S000187911830054X?via%3Dihub doi:10.1016/j.jvb.2018.05.008 doi:10.1016/j.jvb.2018.05.008
spellingShingle emotional intelligence; career decision self-efficacy; career decision-making difficulties; university students; mediation
Santos, Angeli
Wang, Weiwei
Lewis, Jenny
Emotional intelligence and career decision-making difficulties: the mediating role of career decision self-efficacy
title Emotional intelligence and career decision-making difficulties: the mediating role of career decision self-efficacy
title_full Emotional intelligence and career decision-making difficulties: the mediating role of career decision self-efficacy
title_fullStr Emotional intelligence and career decision-making difficulties: the mediating role of career decision self-efficacy
title_full_unstemmed Emotional intelligence and career decision-making difficulties: the mediating role of career decision self-efficacy
title_short Emotional intelligence and career decision-making difficulties: the mediating role of career decision self-efficacy
title_sort emotional intelligence and career decision-making difficulties: the mediating role of career decision self-efficacy
topic emotional intelligence; career decision self-efficacy; career decision-making difficulties; university students; mediation
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/51354/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/51354/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/51354/