£129.50
Language Teachers' Emotional Dynamics in Technology-Based Contexts
Introduction to Key Issues
This book introduces two significant, yet under-connected issues: emotions and technology-related experiences, that are currently of immense importance in language teachers’ professional work, and fills the gap in scholarship on language teachers’ emotions in digital settings.
Contribution to Scholarship
It contributes to this line of thinking and research by bringing together theoretical and empirical studies that cover a wide range of contexts in terms of international readership.
Understanding Emotions in Teaching
In this regard, emotions are defined in terms of how they relate to various different dimensions of teachers’ professionalism, such as identity, agency, social and cultural capitals, motivation, self-efficacy, and across the range of synchronous and asynchronous settings in which teachers are positioned.
Such a perspective embraces how researchers from different countries and across diverse educational levels (including pre-service, in-service, private, English for academic purposes, higher education) view emotions and their roles in teachers’ professional performances.
Focus on Technology-Related Experiences
Of particular interest to readers in this book is how researchers connect emotions to teachers’ technology-related professional experiences in light of established theoretical frameworks.