Commonly, IQ is accepted as the acronym for Intelligent Quotient, referring to a person’s ability to score high or low marks in a set of standardized intelligence tests. It is hoped that a person with a high IQ score is more intelligent than those with low IQ scores. As has been observed often, an IQ score does not reflect or measure things like life experience, wisdom, or personal qualities like being a good friend or a caring mother. In other words, it is not a predictor of a person’s quality or worth, though it has occasionally been used as such. Similarly, EQ stands for Emotional Intelligence Quotient. Much like an IQ, an EQ is said to be not only a measure of a person’s emotional intelligence, but it also, purportedly, a representative of a person’s social behavior, social skills and her/his ability to construct and/or destruct relationships. Our hitherto forays The Development Sector have nudged us towards extrapolating the above two concepts to arrive at a sector-appropriate c
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