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SteelMaiden
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20 Mar 2015, 2:09 pm

btbnnyr wrote:
What will change if you file a complaint?
What are you going to get from UCL if they take your complaint seriously?
I saw that UCL has mentors for students with ASD, are they able to help you with some communication issues relating to classes?


I am not sure waht exactly will change but I have heard that I am not the only one having problems.
I have a full-time support worker at UCL who sits with me in all my lectures and between lectures, to stop me from having a meltdown, panic attack or just not attending lectures at all through fear of sensory overload. The uni didn't do much to organise the support worker: my home support worker, a friend of mine, my care coordinator and I did 80% of the organising of the support worker. If we hadn't put the effort in I wouldn't have had one.


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cyberdad
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20 Mar 2015, 6:10 pm

btbnnyr wrote:
cyberdad wrote:
btbnnyr wrote:
It seems that measures of emotional intelligence are only associated with but not shown to cause or be good predictors of academic achievement.
The academic achievement levels used in studies are rough groups like comparing >80% scores as high achievement vs. <60% scores as low achievement.
I would guess that at the highest levels of academic achievement, emotional intelligence ackshuly drops.


Generally agree with this. I'm not 100% certain EQ would drop in the highest level of academic achievement though.


A lot of people at highest academic achievement levels have high AQ, and usually people with high AQ have low EQ.

We probably need to agree what is high AQ? I assume you are referring to the North American GPA or grade point average? In Australia we have nominal Pass/Credit/Distinction and High Distinction which varies along GPA depending on the state.

If then you have very high AQ you will need to modulate your emotions in order to focus/concentrate and attain high grades. This would not be likely unless you have moderate to high EQ...of course if you are referring to savant autistic individuals with photographic memory then that's another matter entirely.



Protogenoi
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20 Mar 2015, 9:46 pm

I just read a study that showed that a persons IQ increases when you give them a monetary reward for scoring well. The greater the monetary reward, the higher the IQ. A $10 reward can cause IQ to be 20 points higher.

http://news.sciencemag.org/2011/04/what ... ly-measure


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btbnnyr
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20 Mar 2015, 9:47 pm

cyberdad wrote:
btbnnyr wrote:
cyberdad wrote:
btbnnyr wrote:
It seems that measures of emotional intelligence are only associated with but not shown to cause or be good predictors of academic achievement.
The academic achievement levels used in studies are rough groups like comparing >80% scores as high achievement vs. <60% scores as low achievement.
I would guess that at the highest levels of academic achievement, emotional intelligence ackshuly drops.


Generally agree with this. I'm not 100% certain EQ would drop in the highest level of academic achievement though.


A lot of people at highest academic achievement levels have high AQ, and usually people with high AQ have low EQ.

We probably need to agree what is high AQ? I assume you are referring to the North American GPA or grade point average? In Australia we have nominal Pass/Credit/Distinction and High Distinction which varies along GPA depending on the state.

If then you have very high AQ you will need to modulate your emotions in order to focus/concentrate and attain high grades. This would not be likely unless you have moderate to high EQ...of course if you are referring to savant autistic individuals with photographic memory then that's another matter entirely.


By AQ, I mean autism quotient.
I can tell you that focusing and concentrating don't require much modulation of emotions at all, you just have to focus on your special interest like autistic people often do.
The people I am talking about are people around me, many of whom have lots of autistic traits and high AQ/low EQ and highest levels of academic achievement.


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cyberdad
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20 Mar 2015, 11:03 pm

btbnnyr wrote:
cyberdad wrote:
btbnnyr wrote:
cyberdad wrote:
btbnnyr wrote:
It seems that measures of emotional intelligence are only associated with but not shown to cause or be good predictors of academic achievement.
The academic achievement levels used in studies are rough groups like comparing >80% scores as high achievement vs. <60% scores as low achievement.
I would guess that at the highest levels of academic achievement, emotional intelligence ackshuly drops.


Generally agree with this. I'm not 100% certain EQ would drop in the highest level of academic achievement though.


A lot of people at highest academic achievement levels have high AQ, and usually people with high AQ have low EQ.

We probably need to agree what is high AQ? I assume you are referring to the North American GPA or grade point average? In Australia we have nominal Pass/Credit/Distinction and High Distinction which varies along GPA depending on the state.

If then you have very high AQ you will need to modulate your emotions in order to focus/concentrate and attain high grades. This would not be likely unless you have moderate to high EQ...of course if you are referring to savant autistic individuals with photographic memory then that's another matter entirely.


By AQ, I mean autism quotient.
I can tell you that focusing and concentrating don't require much modulation of emotions at all, you just have to focus on your special interest like autistic people often do.
The people I am talking about are people around me, many of whom have lots of autistic traits and high AQ/low EQ and highest levels of academic achievement.

Yes, I can agree with that...