The Emotional Experiences of Chinese High School Students Learning English as a Second Language
Lili Feng,
Jaewoo Shim and
Heechul Lee
World Journal of English Language, 2025, vol. 15, issue 5, 350
Abstract:
This study investigated the achievement emotions of Chinese first-year high school students learning English as a foreign language (EFL). We adopted Pekrun et al.'s (2023) three-dimensional taxonomy of achievement emotions and applied it to the English learning context. A total of 178 students responded to a 6-point Likert scale measuring EFL achievement emotions. Data were analyzed using SPSS 27.0. Multiple regression analysis was conducted to identify emotional factors influencing students' achievement scores. Canonical correlation analysis was employed to examine the relationships between the following sets of variables- a set of variables of foreign language outcome-retrospective emotions (FLORE); a set of variables of foreign language outcome-prospective emotions (FLOPE); and a set of variables of foreign language activity emotions (FLAE). The results showed that pride had a significant positive effect on learners' English achievement scores, while anxiety had a significant negative effect. Canonical analysis revealed that the total redundancies among the three models were 22.8%, 26.2%, and 45.6%, respectively. This indicates that negative active emotions were positively associated with negative outcome-reflective and prospective negative emotions, whereas prospective positive emotions were linked to positive reflective emotions. The findings indicate that EFL learners who exhibited displeasure and faced challenges related to their competence in completing English tasks, both before and during English learning, tended to feel more anxiety and less pride. Conversely, students who anticipated academic success were more likely to feel pride in their achievement success. These findings suggest that task demands, cooperative English language learning activities, and effective communication regarding emotions promote positive emotions and reduce negative emotions.
Date: 2025
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:jfr:wjel11:v:15:y:2025:i:5:p:350
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