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Development and Validation of Emotional Intelligence Model and Scale: A Case of Hypermarkets of Pakistan

Thesis Info

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Author

Razzaq, Faryal

Program

PhD

Institute

Bahria University

City

Islamabad

Province

Islamabad

Country

Pakistan

Thesis Completing Year

2018

Thesis Completion Status

Completed

Subject

Management Sciences

Language

English

Link

http://prr.hec.gov.pk/jspui/bitstream/123456789/12613/1/faryal%20razzaq_managment%20sci_Bahria_2542019.pdf

Added

2021-02-17 19:49:13

Modified

2024-03-24 20:25:49

ARI ID

1676724610865

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Emotional Intelligence (EQ) is considered to be an important attribute to succeed at top level of management and is a distinguishing factor among top performing employees at workplace. However, the discrepancy in the elements of EQ models entails to develop an indigenous EQ measure that exists especially in the context of Pakistan’s workplace. Gap also points towards a holistic, multilevel and sequential model with a carefully validated scale. To address aforesaid shortcomings an indigenous model for EQ was proposed. A comprehensive theoretical analysis for EQ dimensions helped to identify the domain of new content. All crucial elements of existing EQ models were regrouped into three constructs of EA, EL and EM to present a logical underpinning. A scale (EQFS©1) was developed based on the hypothesized relationship of proposed model’s factor structures and linear relationships of the constructs of model. Operational definitions were generated and used to phrase scale items (candidate items). Subject matter experts’ opinion helped refine item thereby establishing Face and Content Validity. The raw measurement scale was pre-tested in a pilot study (Razzaq & Aftab, 2015) and based on the results the final scale was refined and floated to the managers of 4 hypermarkets generating 339 valid responses. Cronbach alpha was used for internal consistency of EQFS and was validated through Exploratory Factor Analysis and Confirmatory Factor Analysis all the hypothesized relations at first, second and third order factor analysis were accepted. A comprehensive strategy was adopted for Validity analysis for establishing content, criterion and construct validity. Model was tested through Structural Equational Modelling for EQFS© the mediating effect of EL with EA and EM was established. Except for the convergent validity with BarOn EQi scale the statistical significance of validities were established. The proposed Model disambiguate EI as exhaustibly as possible in a hierarchical and sequential manner to allow reasoning about their structure working towards an integrated framework of all the elements of influential EI models as suggested by practitioners. The proposed model and EQFS© will be a valuable tool for managers and academia and an important theoretical contribution to EQ literature.
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۔۔۔کے پروفائل پر بلی دیکھ کر

۔۔ ۔کے پروفائل پر بلّی دیکھ کر

پالی میں نے بھی اک بلّی
دیکھی تیرے گھر جب بلّی

تیرے گھر میں جو بلّی ہے
بھولی بھالی سی دِکھتی ہے
خوب شرارت پر کرتی ہے
تیرے بستر پر بیٹھی ہے

مجھ کو کیسے گھور رہی ہے
تجھ سے ملنے جب آتا ہوں
اِس کے بسکٹ بھی لاتا ہوں

یہ کتنے نخرے کرتی ہے
بس تیرے جیسی لگتی ہے
کیک بیکری کے کھاتی ہے
اور پھر بھی گھورے جاتی ہے

یہ سب کچھ دیکھا میں نے تو
پالی میں نے بھی اک بلّی
ایسی نہیں پر میری بلّی
تیری بلّی ، تیری بلّی
ایسی نہیں پر میری بلّی

Freedom of the Press: The War on Words (1977-1978)

Journalism in Pakistan has passed through successive phases of trials and tribulations. The crises journalism had to undergo since independence had their origin both in the state policies as well as the authoritarianism embedded in the society. The book under review does not claim to divulge into the societal challenges which have emerged more visibly in the last three or four decades, especially, in the context of the spread of religious extremism and ethnic and other types of militancy in the society. Studies need to be done on these aspects as well as the external factors that have had impact on the growth and the content of media. The latter has come in the garb of globalization that has greatly affected the local environment and has come to strongly affect, if not directly dictate, what the media should encompass and present. Leaving the societal and global aspects aside, the role of the state and the successive governments has a lot to offer to be written about by way of what the media has endured in the last seventy plus years. It doesn’t need too much of pondering to conclude that the major pressures over media have come from the governments who, by and large, had been quite at unease with independent flow of information, and criticism of their policies. And, unfortunately, this process had begun right after Independence when newspapers’ and periodicals’ independent voice was tried to be silenced, and they were pressurized to toe the official line with respect to domestic and foreign policies. Pakistan’s independent journey, unfortunately, began with the imposition of black laws which prohibited dissent and curtailed freedom of expression in the strongest possible manner.

Microfacies, Diagenesis and Depositional Environments of Samana Suk Formation Middle Jurassic Carbonates Exposed in South East Hazara and Samana Range

This document presents the results of detailed work on the microfacies analysis, depositional environments and diagenetic history of the Middle Jurassic carbonates system, (The Samana Suk Formation) investigated in the three measured outcrop sections (total thickness 785m) in the Hazara and Kohat area. The three sections (Sanghar Gali, Bagh and Samana Range) lie along the northern rim of the Upper Indus Basin of Pakistan. Rocks exposed in the three above mentioned localities were investigated in the field for facies and sedimentary structures. 800 samples were collected and each sample was further investigated on polished slab, and 850 thin-sections were prepared for detailed petrographic analysis. All the data generated was interpreted for depositional environments and diagenetic imprints. This work is also supported by selected SEM photographs, forty two oxygen and carbon isotope analyses and fourteen trace element analyses. The data from the three studied sections is presented semi-quantitatively in Sedimentary Synthesis Logs and Diagenetic Feature Logs. The results are also supported by biostratigraphic analysis of selected shales and limestone samples. All the results of these studies were integrated to propose a likely depositional or sequence stratigraphic model of the Samana Suk Formation. Benthic foraminiferal data suggest that carbonate sedimentation started in Bajocian (Middle Jurassic) and might have continued until Callovian time. The data has also confirmed the Bathonian age from the middle part of the formation in the Samana Range Section. On the whole, the faunal/floral assemblage suggest sedimentation of the Samana Suk Formation occurred on the shallow to very shallow marine setting typical of gently dipping shelf/ramp., The assemblages suggest various episodes of sea level rise and fall. Thirty microfacies have been identified that were deposited in variety of environments. Generally the formation is dominated by oolitic grainstone, that have deposited in shallow marine subtidal to intertidal environments as an oolitic shoal complex on a gently inclined carbonate ramp/platform which might have attained slightly rimed shape in a later stage. Within the whole succession about 19, 20 and 31 shallowing upward cycles have been interpreted in the Sanghar Gali, Bagh and Samana Range Sections respectively. These cycles vary in numbers and thickness in the three studied sections and do not correlate individually across the study area. Such cycles normally start from mudstone (M2) and/or wackestone (W1 or W2) and terminate at oolitic grainstone while occasionally complete cycles go up to pelletal pack-grainstone (PG1) and/or unfossiliferous mudstone (M1), representing the tidal flat facies. These cycles are parasequences which started from subtidal environments and terminate in intertidal environments and rarely end in supratidal environment. Twenty six different diagenetic features have been identified in the Samana Suk Formation. Overall, diagenetic sequence ranges from marine phreatic to deep burial. However dominant influences of meteoric phreatic and mixed meteoric marine environments during shallow burial have also been observed. Dolomite, though minor component relative to limestone, is present in several forms in the Samana Suk Formation such as layers and thin beds, dolomitized burrows, grain selective and cement/matrix selective dolomite, molds and fracture filling dolomite, dolomite developed along sutured seams and stylolites, and pervasive dolomite. Dolomite in the Sanghar Gali and Bagh Sections is common, while in the Samana Range Section it is rare. Dolomitized burrows and pervasive dolomite in the upper 35m of the Bagh Section are volumetrically important. Dolomite layers, beds and pervasive dolomite were developed in meteoric marine mixing zone. Bio-pumping together with bacterial activities in the burrow network, related to the burrowing organisms, was probably responsible for the preferential dolomitization of burrow fillings. The grainstone horizons originally had good primary intergranular/ interparticle porosity, which was first reduced by early mechanical compaction and later on occluded during diagenesis by seven different types of calcite cements. Three phases of dissolution and four phases of fracturing have been identified which have generated secondary intergranular porosity (i. e., mouldic, vuggy and fracture) which has also been occluded. Two sets of fractures are filled with medium to coarse blocky calcite, 3rd set is filled with internal sediments whereas 4th set is filled with dolomite. The high resolution microfacies and cyclicity, biostratigraphic abundance data has been used to interpret the significant depositional surfaces such as flooding surfaces (transgressions) and sequence boundaries (regressions). Four flooding surfaces and four sequence boundaries have been interpreted which divides the whole Samana Suk Formation into four 3rd order sequences. These sequences have only highstand and transgressive system tracts. This interpretation is based on the most striking contrast in the microfacies. The proposed model shows proximal facies (mainly oolitic shoal and back shoal facies) towards the east-southeast while distal or open marine facies (mainly mudstone/marl) towards the west-northwest. This also implies that the lowstand system tract is probably preserved further west of the Samana Range section.