Young Learners’ Well-Being and Emotions: Examining Enjoyment and Boredom in the Foreign Language Classroom

Emotions have received widespread attention in the education field globally thanks to the greater emphasis on well-being in recent times. Against this backdrop and the fact that foreign language (FL) education is increasingly common from a young age, this study set out to investigate what FL classro...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Asia-Pacific education researcher 2024-12, Vol.33 (6), p.1481-1488
Hauptverfasser: Tsang, Art, Davis, Christelle
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Emotions have received widespread attention in the education field globally thanks to the greater emphasis on well-being in recent times. Against this backdrop and the fact that foreign language (FL) education is increasingly common from a young age, this study set out to investigate what FL classroom activities children find most enjoyable and most boring, and why. Ninety-eight Grade-5 English-as-a-FL learners in Hong Kong participated in this study. The participants put forward 18 activities that they thought were most enjoyable, especially games and videos (together making up about 49% of the responses) . Fifteen activities were deemed most boring, especially writing and dictation (together 45% of the responses). Fun , knowledge-gaining , and opportunities for interaction were among the most common reasons given for activities being enjoyable, while difficult , troublesome , and tiring were the main descriptors of the activities they thought were boring.
ISSN:0119-5646
2243-7908
DOI:10.1007/s40299-024-00828-3