These are your results from the Personality-Based Emotional Intelligence Test.
You got 24 of 25 questions correct. That is better than 96.2% of people who take this test.
These are your results from the Personality-Based Emotional Intelligence Test.
You got 24 of 25 questions correct. That is better than 96.2% of people who take this test.
There are correct answers? What?
"You got 8 of 25 questions correct. That is better than 14% of people who take this test."
Dude whaaaat. The answers had nothing to do with the statements. So random!
Your Score: 12/20
Not bad. Your score places you around the average at reading expressions.
It just happened that many of my answers to the theoretical scenarios in that test ended up boosting my score. I remember one of the questions was (paraphrasing a bit here): "You are at a dinner party with friends, and your mother makes a remark about your poor table manners and embarrasses you. How do you handle the situation?"
My answer was something along the lines of, "wait until the party is over, and politely explain to her that her comments had embarrassed you, and ask if in the future she would refrain from such behavior." Out of the available options, that was the only sensible one for me. In reality, I would have joked about how I was eating like a barbarian, and then started exercising good table manners. But I could also see why people would have chosen another option...I don't remember feeling any of them was exactly a "wrong" response.
Anyways, this test that Sin posted is not only a lot shorter than the Queendom test, but seems to measure EI a bit more effectively...
I see what you mean...being a cheerful person doesn't preclude said person from any of those possibilities.
The test is trying to ask which answer is most consistent with being the type of person to cheer people up...since the person likes cheering people up, you can assume they are probably a "people person," and since they're a "people person," most likely they would enjoying being part of a group. I do not think you can use deduction to arrive at any of the other answers.