Emotional Intelligence, Creativity, and Subjective Well-Being: Their Implication for Academic Success in Higher Education
Identificadores
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12020/1820ISSN: 2227-7102
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15111562
Fecha
2025Tipo de documento
articleÁrea/s de conocimiento
Ciencias de la EducaciónMateria/s Unesco
5312.04 EducaciónResumen
Professional skills training and academic success are key challenges for contemporary educational systems, particularly within higher education. The labour market increasingly demands well-prepared graduates with specific competencies that are still insufficiently embedded in university curricula. In this context, acquiring new professional skills becomes a decisive factor for students’ employability and competitiveness. At the same time, academic success remains a crucial indicator of educational quality, and its improvement is an urgent priority for universities. In response to these demands, our study evaluates cognitive-emotional competencies—emotional intelligence, creativity, and subjective well-being—in a sample of 300 university students from the Community of Madrid (Spain), analysing their influence on academic success with the aim of enhancing it. A non-experimental, cross-sectional research design was employed, using standardised self-report measures (TMMS-24, CREA, SHS, OHI, SLS, and OLS), innovative data mining algorithms (Random Forest and decision trees), and binary logistic regression techniques. The results highlight the importance of creativity, life satisfaction, and emotional attention in predicting academic success, with creativity showing the strongest discriminative power among the variables studied. These findings reinforce the need to integrate emotional and creative development into university curricula, promoting competency-based educational models that enhance training quality and students’ academic outcomes.





