Abstract

During the COVID-19 pandemic, the online learning of foreign languages at higher education level has represented a way to adapt to the restrictions imposed worldwide. The aim of the present article is to analyse university students’ behaviours, emotions and perceptions associated to online foreign language learning during the pandemic and their correlates by using a mixed approach. The research used the Foreign Language Enjoyment (FLE) scale and tools developed by the authors, focusing on task value, self-perceived foreign language proficiency, stressors and responses in online foreign language learning during the pandemic. Some of the results, such as the negative association between anxiety and FLE, are consistent with those revealed in studies conducted in normal times. Other results are novel, such as the protective role of retrospective enjoyment in trying times or the higher level of enjoyment with lower-achieving students. Reference is made to students’ preferences for certain online resources during the pandemic (e.g., preference for PowerPoint presentations) and to their opinions regarding the use of entirely or partially online foreign language teaching in the post-COVID period. The quantitative results are fostered by the respondents’ voices in the qualitative research. The consequences of these results are discussed with respect to the teacher-student relationship in the online environment and to the implications for sustainable online foreign language learning.

Highlights

  • The Coronavirus pandemic has spanned the world since the beginning of 2020 and has severely disrupted the normal functioning of the entire education sector

  • Mann-Whitney U Test, we found that the stressors and coping behaviours and the unpleasant emotions regarding online Foreign language (FL) learning during the pandemic are not statistically different by gender

  • Our results are partially consistent with past research, the study was conducted in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic

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Summary

Introduction

The Coronavirus pandemic has spanned the world since the beginning of 2020 and has severely disrupted the normal functioning of the entire education sector. Schools and higher education institutions were still closed in 119 countries [1]. Higher education institutions have had to cope with a dramatic change and find alternative methods for the teaching and learning process to continue. The period has been one of adaptive and transformative challenges, triggered by the abrupt shift to distance education, the lack of short- and long-term anticipation, the need for appropriate technical infrastructure, the need for both academics and students to have good digital literacy skills and for the former to be able to implement distance learning pedagogies [4]

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