4.7 Article

Positive Psychology 2.0 in a Foreign Language Classroom: Students' Emotional Experience in English Classroom Interaction in China

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.789579

Keywords

positive psychology; SLA; emotions; classroom interaction; EFL classrooms

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PP 2.0 focuses on the complementary relationship between positive and negative psychology in social contexts, aiming to enhance optimal learning outcomes. The study found that students' positive emotions can transcend negative emotions and impact their engagement in language learning, improving understanding of emotional experiences in second language acquisition.
The second wave of positive psychology (PP 2.0) focuses on the way positive and negative psychology complement each other in social contexts. It offers a balanced interactive model that aims at enhancing the optimal learning outcome through the interplay of positive and negative emotions. Building on a large qualitative study of students' and teachers' experiences in EFL classrooms in China, this paper argues that adopting the principles of PP 2.0 could deepen our understanding of learners' emotional experience in SLA. Using one illustrative case, it shows the dynamic and complexity of students' shifting emotions as they interact in the classroom over a span of 2 months. One major finding is that the students' positive emotions could transcend negative emotions and influence their engagement in classroom interaction. This study contributes to the existing research into emotional experiences of classroom interaction that integrates the observable, reflective, and participatory. It draws on interrelated sets of data, including a student and teacher profile questionnaire, classroom observation and recording, student and teacher reflective journals documenting their classroom interaction experiences, and stimulated recall interviews based on recordings and reflective journals. The study in the first place has implications for English teachers and teacher trainers in China and abroad as well as researchers interested in the role of emotional experience in English language learning and teaching.

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