Abstract

Education must guide students’ emotional development, not only to improve their skills and help them achieve their maximum performance, but to establish the foundations of a more cooperative and compassionate society. Achieving the Sustainable Development Goals, therefore, implies focusing on emotional aspects as well as financial, social, environmental, and scientific objectives. In this line, the goal of this study is to show how emotional intelligence, which is an essential dimension in the development and management of emotional competences required to build sustainable societies, plays a key role in optimising student’s academic performance in the classroom through compassion and academic commitment. The research model was tested with a questionnaire addressed to 550 students from four higher education institutions and one secondary school. The results of a structural equation analysis confirmed the study hypotheses. Emotional intelligence was shown to be positively related to compassion and higher levels of commitment, which, consequently, led to better academic performance. This finding will encourage interest in developing emotional intelligence, not only for its long-term value in training healthy citizens, but also for its short-term results in the classroom.

Highlights

  • IntroductionThe United Nations Summit, held in New York in 2015, adopted the outcome document “Transforming our World: the

  • We propose a model based on the premise that well-developed emotional intelligence (EI) will impact the future graduate’s sustainable life—as has been described in the literature–and the classroom atmosphere in the short term, by supporting the development of compassionate attitudes that will contribute to improving students’ engagement with consequent benefits for their academic performance

  • Results reveal that Hypothesis 1 (H1) regarding the direct relationship between EI and student’s academic performance is rejected, supporting the rest of the hypotheses (H2, Hypothesis 3 (H3), Hypothesis 44 (H4) ) regarding the mediating role of compassion and engagement in the EI–academic performance relationship

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Summary

Introduction

The United Nations Summit, held in New York in 2015, adopted the outcome document “Transforming our World: the

Objectives
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Conclusion
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