语言学、教育学SSCI一区期刊专题征稿
Call for Papers
|GUIDE|
Innovation in Language Learning and Teaching是一本SSCI一区刊物,最新影响因子为3.0,在语言学中排第23,在教育学中排名第96。
Guest Editors
Ali Derakhshan, Golestan University, Gorgan, Iran
a.derakhshan@gu.ac.ir
Zohreh R. Eslami, Texas A & M University, USA
zeslami@tamu.edu
Mariusz Kruk, University of Zielona Gora, Zielona Góra, Poland
mkruk@uz.zgora.pl
Special issue information:
As an emotional process, language education is fraught with various positive and negative emotions. Positive emotions that are experienced by language teachers and learners promote their well-being and facilitate the language education process. Negative emotions, on the other hand, endanger language teachers’ and learners’ mental condition and hinder the language education mechanism. In fact, those who experience adverse emotions such as aggression, anxiety, apprehension, frustration, exhaustion, boredom, and burnout are more susceptible to mental disorders. Given that mental disorders negatively influence language teachers’ and learners’ classroom performance, factors instilling unpleasant feelings in their minds must be identified. Simply put, factors predicting language teachers’ and learners’ negative emotions need to be widely studied.
To address this necessity, several educational researchers worldwide have delved into the internal and external causes of negative emotions in the mainstream education settings. Likewise, some language scholars have studied the sources of negative emotions in language education environments. Nonetheless, studying the determinants of negative emotions among language teachers and learners is still in its infancy. Furthermore, as the review of the pertinent literature revealed, almost all previous inquiries employed traditional research methods in exploring the predictors of language teachers’ and learners’ negative emotions. Given the complex and dynamic nature of classroom emotions, examining negative emotions and their potential determinants in language classes through innovative research approaches seems more logical. Considering this, in the present special collection, we intend to invite applied linguists and language researchers around the world to scrutinize the causes or predictors of language teachers' and learners' negative emotions through emerging research methodologies.
Topics
In the current special issue, we intend to bring together research studies exploring the personal, interpersonal, and situational factors that moderate or reduce negative emotions among language teachers and learners. We welcome original research, reviews, commentaries, case reports, and meta-analyses. Regarding the design of studies in this area, they can be longitudinal, qualitative exploration of a few cases in detail, experimental, large-scale quantitative exploration of correlational or cause-effect relationships, or mixed methods research studies. To examine language teachers’ and learners’ negative emotions and their interplay with personal, interpersonal, and environmental factors, researchers should take advantage of innovative research methods such as nested ecosystem model, ecological momentary assessment, time-series analysis, retrodictive qualitative modeling, Q-methodology, latent profile analysis, and idiodynamic method.
1.Impact of learning atmosphere on language learners’ anger, apprehension, demotivation, anxiety, and boredom
We are interested in receiving submissions on the potential influences of the learning environment on language learners’ unfavorable emotions like anger, apprehension, demotivation, anxiety, and boredom. Papers will examine whether the learning environment can reduce negative or undesirable emotions among language learners.
2.Influence of organizational climate on language teachers’ dissatisfaction, emotional exhaustion, and burnout
We welcome submissions on the direct or indirect impacts of organizational climate on language instructors’ negative emotions. Studies will evaluate the role organizational climate in decreasing language instructors’ negative emotions like dissatisfaction, emotional exhaustion, and burnout.
3.Role of language teachers’ personal characteristics in their job burnout
We also welcome submissions that delve into the role of language teachers’ personal characteristics in their job burnout. Inquiries will investigate whether language teachers’ personal traits such as resilience, flexibility, patience, self-esteem, or self-efficacy can decrease the rate of burnout among language teachers.
4.Role of language teachers’ professional traits in their psychological and emotional disengagement
We are also interested in receiving submissions on the potential role of language teachers’ professional qualities in reducing their psychological and emotional disengagement. Papers will assess the degree to which job-related characteristics can lead language teachers to higher levels of psychological and emotional engagement.
5.Influence of language learners’ misconducts on their teachers’ attrition
We are looking for submissions that explore the effects of language learners’ misbehaviors on their teachers’ attrition. Studies will try to find out whether language teachers' attrition depends upon their pupils’ misbehaviors in classroom contexts.
6.Role of language learners’ personal characteristics in their academic disengagement
We are especially interested in submissions that probe the possible role of language learners’ personal traits in their academic disengagement. Papers will examine the extent to which language learners’ personal qualities like motivation, self-efficacy, adaptability, and patience can predict their engagement in academic environments.
7.Interplay between teacher communication behaviors and language learners’ negative emotions
We also aim to collect empirical studies assessing the associations between teacher communication behaviors and language learners’ undesirable feelings. Papers will study language learners’ undesirable feelings in relation to teacher communication behaviors like caring, confirmation, credibility, clarity, and closeness.
Abstract Submission Guidelines
Potential topics include but are not limited to the following:
Impact of learning atmosphere on language learners’ anger, apprehension, demotivation, anxiety, and boredom;
Influence of organizational climate on language teachers’ dissatisfaction, emotional exhaustion, and burnout;
Role of language teachers’ personal characteristics in their job burnout;
Role of language teachers’ professional traits in their psychological and emotional disengagement;
Influence of language learners’ misconducts on their teachers’ attrition;
Role of language learners’ personal characteristics in their academic disengagement;
Interplay between teacher communication behaviors and language learners’ negative emotions.
Preparing Your Paper
Should be written with the following elements in the following order: title page; abstract; keywords; main text introduction, materials and methods, results, discussion; acknowledgments; declaration of interest statement; references; appendices (as appropriate); table(s) with caption(s) (on individual pages); figures; figure captions (as a list)
Should be no more than 7000 words, inclusive of:
Abstract
Tables
References
Figure or table captions
Footnotes
Endnotes
Should contain a structured abstract of 250 words.
Important Dates:
Submission deadline: 31/7/2024
Publication: January 2025
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