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Scholastic Success: Fluid Intelligence, Personality, and Emotional Intelligence

journal contribution
posted on 2025-11-20, 00:03 authored by Luke A Downey, Justine LomasJustine Lomas, Clare Billings, Karen Hansen, Con Stough
The aim of the current study was to examine the role of fluid intelligence, personality traits, and emotional intelligence (EI) in predicting female Year 9 students’ grade point average (GPA) and to determine whether any differences in scholastic performance were related to differences in EI or Personality. Two-hundred and forty-three female secondary students who were enrolled in Year 9 (age: M = 14.63 years, SD = 0.49) completed the Adolescent Swinburne University EI Test, Raven’s Standard Progressive Matrices, and the Mini International Personality Item Pool (Mini-IPIP) and a GPA was calculated from the core subjects. The results revealed that higher GPAs were related to higher levels of Emotional Management and Control (EMC), Conscientiousness, and lower levels of Extraversion. The stepwise regression analysis revealed that variation in GPA was accounted for by IQ (21.8%), Conscientiousness, Extraversion, and EMC. It was concluded that the consistent predictive efficacy of EI skills in relation to scholastic outcomes, although modest in comparison to IQ, should be considered important, especially in the context of students achieving grades appropriate to their intellect across their schooling experience.

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Open access

  • No

Language

eng

Journal

Canadian Journal Of School Psychology

Volume

29

Pagination

40-53

ISSN

0829-5735

eISSN

2154-3984

Issue

1

Publisher

SAGE

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