Author(s)
PRADMAN KRISHAN DHAR
- Manuscript ID: 140165
- Volume: 2
- Issue: 3
- Pages: 57–63
Subject Area: Other
DOI: https://doi.org/10.64643/JATIRV2I3-140165-001Abstract
The present investigation explored the influence of Emotional Intelligence (EI) on Job Satisfaction among secondary school teachers and examined whether sex moderates this relationship. The study employed a 2×2 factorial design with Emotional Intelligence (high vs. low) and Sex (male vs. female) as independent variables and Job Satisfaction as the dependent variable. A stratified random sample of 150 teachers was drawn from government secondary schools in Jammu city. Standardized instruments were used to assess Emotional Intelligence and Job Satisfaction. Two-Way ANOVA revealed a statistically significant main effect of Emotional Intelligence on Job Satisfaction, F (1,76) = 47.83, p < .01, η² = .28, indicating a large effect size. The main effect of Sex was not significant, F (1,76) = 0.79, p > .05, η² = .004. However, the interaction between Emotional Intelligence and Sex was significant, F (1,76) = 46.89, p < .01, η² = .27. The findings demonstrate that emotional competencies substantially contribute to teachers’ professional satisfaction. The study highlights the need for systematic emotional intelligence training within teacher education frameworks.