Abstract

This study analyzes the emotional difficulties of adolescents in residential care in Catalonia (Spain). The Emotion- al Quotient Inventory (EQ-i) was administered to a sample of 30 adolescents in residential care and the results were compared with those obtained in a group of 89 young people from the normative population and a group of 33 adolescents from the disadvantaged backgrounds, the aim being to see whether differences in emo- tional competences were due to the effects of institutionalization or the disadvantaged family environment. Overall, there was no significant difference in the level of emotional intelligence shown by the three groups of adolescents. However, the analysis by gender did reveal differences, with boys in residential care scoring signif- icantly lower than both the normative population and the adolescents from the disadvantaged backgrounds on the total EQ-i and on the component scale adaptability. They also scored significantly lower than the normative group on general mood and lower than the adolescents from the disadvantaged backgrounds on stress manage- ment. Although there were no differences between girls in residential care and those from the normative popu- lation, girls in care scored higher than their counterparts from the disadvantaged backgrounds on the total EQ-i and on the component scales Interpersonal and adaptability.

Authors
X Oriol, G Filella Guiu, y J Sala Roca
Citation Key
136
COinS Data

Date Published
2016-09-29 07:34
DOI
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.childyouth.2014.06.009
Journal
Children and Youth Services Review
Start Page
334–340
URL
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0190740914002205
Volume
44
Year of Publication
2014