International Association for the
Psychology of Language Learning (IAPLL)
Journal
for the Psychology of Language Learning
ISSN: 2642-7001.
http://www.iapll.com/journal
Issue 1, June 2019, pp. 142–147
Book Review:
Positive Psychology Perspectives on Foreign Language Learning and Teaching.
Edited Collection by Danuta Gabryś-Barker and Dagmara Galajda.
Reviewed
by Sonja Babic, University of Graz, Austria
Traditionally, within psychology, the focus has been on the negative
aspects of human functioning and how to improve and treat problems. Positive
Psychology (PP) emerged to balance the field by ensuring a consideration of both positive and negative dimensions;
to examine what goes well in life as well as instances of disorder and
dysfunction. As a result, PP concentrates on “positive emotion, positive
character traits, and institutions that enable individuals to flourish”
(MacIntyre, 2016, p. 3). PP has recently started gaining researchers’ attention
in language learning and teaching (MacIntyre, Gregersen, & Mercer, 2016),
although it is still in its infancy within Second Language Acquisition (SLA).
This volume is one of the first few edited collections to address this nascent
field. It comprises theoretical, practical and empirical studies of foreign
language learning and teaching through the lens of PP. It encompasses four main
sections, namely, introducing PP in SLA; focus on learners: positive
interventions; focus on teachers: personal and professional wellbeing; and,
focus on assessment: achievement and success.
The first section of the book aims at introducing positive
psychology in SLA and consists of three chapters. In the first chapter, Peter
D. MacIntyre identifies key trends in current research in PP and SLA. MacIntyre
suggests that PP has achieved a good start in SLA, which is being increasingly
recognized in the field as it fits perfectly with modern language pedagogy. He highlights
four key contributions; namely, distinguishing between positive and negative
emotions; examining and applying the model of character strengths in SLA;
extending Seligman’s (2011) PERMA model of wellbeing (which stands for positive emotions, engagement, meaning,
positive relationships, and accomplishment) to Oxford’s (2016)
EMPHATICS; and, highlighting the concept of Csikszentmihalyi’s (1990) “flow” in
SLA. MacIntyre claims that SLA can benefit greatly from considering PP;
however, he emphasizes the need “to balance theory, research, and practice as
we move forward along this potentially exciting path” (p. 17). In the second
chapter, Rebecca Oxford expands on PERMA model of wellbeing and offers
EMPHATICS model. The model encompasses nine concepts: E - emotions and empathy;
M - meaning and motivation; P - perseverance, resilience, hope, and optimism; A
- agency and autonomy; T - time; H - hardiness and habits of mind; I -
intelligences; C - character strengths; and, S - self-factors such as
self-efficacy, self-concept, self-esteem, and self-verification. This is an
exhaustive wellbeing model containing constructs that can empower language
learning processes. In the last chapter of this section, Hanna Komorowska
explores diverse interpretations of PP aspects in SLA or foreign language
teaching (FLT), and what mythology, religion, psychology, and sociology suggest
in terms of understanding the impact of positive and negative affect on
language learners. Komorowska found that four learners’ personality
characteristics seem to be particularly important in coping with difficulty in
language learning: self-efficacy, lack of sensitivity to negative stimulation,
resilience, and the sense of coherence, which is described as the “ability to
identify both the content and the value of messages” (p. 51).
The second and largest section of the edited collection
encompasses eight chapters, and concerns language learners and PP interventions
(PPI). PPIs are tools and activities that “teach individuals ways to increase
their positive thinking, positive affect, and positive behaviors” (Layous,
Chancellor, Lyubomirsky, Wang, and Doraiswamy, 2011, p. 675). Investigating how
to empower learners and their learning has dominated SLA research, which is
mirrored in the larger number of chapters in this section.
In the first chapter of the second section, Tammy Gregersen
reports on six language learner PPIs, respectively—gratitude, altruism, music,
pets, laughter, and exercise. Gregersen found that experiencing positive
emotions can facilitate language learning, help learners to enjoy the process,
and create greater stamina for their language learning endeavours. In the next
chapter, Liliana Piasecka investigates another PPI—activating character
strengths through poetic encounters in foreign language. According to Piasecka,
character strengths such as creativity, courage, curiosity, open-mindedness,
zest, self-control, social intelligence, and appreciation of beauty are tightly
connected to self-efficacy and life satisfaction. PPIs that help language
learners in higher education to set and achieve their learning goals and
practice self-regulation of emotion strategies are addressed by Sylwia
Kossakowska-Pisarek in the following chapter. The study took place at the
University of Warsaw, in which 229 students of Legal English course participated.
She found that PPIs in turn could facilitate language learning and help
students reach optimal level of functioning; however, further research in this
area, according to the author, is certainly called for. Andrea Dallas and Mary
Hatakka, in the next chapter, report on two iterations of a workshop
(face-to-face and online), which focuses on PPIs that encourage freshmen L2
students to develop a sense of personal responsibility (PR) toward their
studies. Dallas and Hatakka discovered that students need more time, feedback,
and support to create and apply PR within and beyond their academic lives. In
the following chapter, Ewa Guz and Małgorzata Tetiurka examine the relationship
between teachers and learners, including factors that contribute to positive
emotions and learner engagement. Forty-five Polish pre-service teachers from
English Department at John Paul II Catholic University of Lublin participated
in the study. The teachers were instructed to design their own lesson plan in
accordance with the curriculum, and to record and transcribe their own lesson.
The authors merely focused on the extent and intensity of learner engagement.
They found that learner engagement and positive emotions are closely related to
teachers’ positive emotions and mindset, which consequently encourage learners
and create overall positive learning atmosphere. The authors also observed that
certain kinds of pedagogical interventions are evidently more engaging than
others. In the succeeding chapter, Danuta Gabryś-Barker looks into the effects
of classroom climate on foreign language learning, personal development, and
wellbeing of teachers and learners. Gabryś-Barker’s findings suggest ways in
how to improve classroom climate through creating certain codes that teachers
and learners agree upon. These codes (rights and duties that could be grounded
in PP) put equal responsibility on teachers and learners and thus could
positively influence foreign classroom atmosphere. In the next chapter,
Katarzyna Ożańska-Ponikwia explores personality characteristics and emotional
intelligence (EI) in relation to learning a foreign language in immigrant and
non-migrant contexts. The findings show that a considerable number of
personality and EI traits is related to the variables such as openness,
self-esteem, and wellbeing. The last chapter in this section reports on a study
conducted by Beata Malczewska-Webb on the positive sides of living and studying
in Australia for 597 international students. Malczewska-Webb found that the
factors that contribute most to positive experiences of these students are
environment, social aspects and fun, and healthy lifestyle.
The third section of this edited collection focuses on teacher
personal and professional wellbeing and consists of four chapters. Sarah
Mercer, Pia Oberdorfer, and Mehvish Saleem’s chapter opens the section. The
authors argue that teacher psychology and wellbeing play a crucial role in
language learning processes and note a relative absence of research about
teacher psychology. They further emphasize the crucial importance of supporting
(language) teachers in their “rewarding but demanding” (p. 221) jobs and
discuss possible ways to protect the teachers and promote their professional
wellbeing in various professional settings. In the following chapter, Anna
Ligia Wirczorek explores factors that contribute to stress among foreign
language teachers and discusses how inhibitions and self-esteem influence the
language teachers and their professional wellbeing in this study. Another
under-investigated aspect of teacher psychology is addressed by Elena Gallo in
the following chapter. The author explores the ways in which university
language teachers approach their professional development (PD), and the impact
of affective factors on teacher professional development (TPD). Gallo
identifies four teacher goals; namely, instructional, occupational,
developmental and affective-emotional goals, and three appraisal patterns in
teacher learning behavior. She also discovered that positive emotions and TPD
are closely related, and calls for further research in this area. In the final
chapter of this section, Teresa Maria Włosowicz investigates university
students’ expectations regarding their foreign language teachers, including the
teaching and learning process. While some students prefer a teacher to be
strict, the majority of students in this study highlight the importance of a
good relationship with the teacher, who they feel should be patient and
empathetic and, in terms of skills development, emphasise speaking practice.
The five chapters in the last section of this book draw attention
to the implementation of PP in foreign language assessment, achievement and
success. In the first chapter, Monika Kusiak-Pisowacka reports on how to
improve assessment experience for both learners and teachers. The author offers
valuable insights and suggests ways to enhance positive experiences of language
assessment. Agnieszka Strzałka, in the next chapter, explores whether earning
academic credits in an intercultural communication university course can be
enjoyable. It was found that developing students’ strengths such as curiosity,
zest, and teamwork contribute to more pleasurable learning experience. Next,
Jan Zalewski explores ways to help low-achieving students, who would
traditionally be excluded from tertiary education, to achieve academic success.
Zalewski’s findings suggest explicit literacy instruction can be enormously
helpful in ensuring positive educational experiences for the low-achieving
students. In the succeeding chapter, Ewa Piechurska-Kuciel examines the
self-regulated efficacy and attainment of 621 foreign language students in a
Polish grammar school. Piechurska-Kuciel found that students with higher-level
of self-regulated efficacy differ from the lower-level students in terms of personal
goals, grade achievement, and their own perception of control. Piotr Szymczak’s
chapter closes the last section and the book. Szymczak explores ways to improve
translation competitions based on the PERMA model of wellbeing. According to
Szymczak, the most important aspects are fair assessment procedure, providing
feedback, and inviting competitors not to experience the competition as a test
of their skills, but as a “new experience and an opportunity to make new
contacts, turning a test into a celebration of their skills and knowledge” (p.
364).
Together, these chapters offer a rich introduction to the field,
but it is notable that there remains a strong focus on individual psychology
with relatively little consideration of social or embodied aspects of
psychology. Perhaps future studies in PP and SLA could include contemplations
of social, collective and embodied perspectives on the psychologies of both learners and teachers. Finally, a
concluding chapter that draws together the main themes across the chapters
would have been a valuable addition in highlighting important issues and future
directions for this relatively young field of research. That said, this
collection remains an invaluable source of knowledge covering a range of
empirical, theoretical and practical concerns for teachers and learners making
it a rich contribution to the emergent field of PP in SLA.
Full Publication Details
Title: Positive Psychology
Perspectives on Foreign Language Learning and Teaching.
Editors: Danuta Gabryś-Barker
and Dagmara Galajda
Date: 2016
Publisher: Springer International
Publishing, Switzerland.
Number of pages: 366
Number of chapters: 20
ISBN-10:
3319329537
ISBN-13:
9783319329536
References
Csikszentmihalyi, M.
(1990). Flow: The psychology of optimal
experience. New York, NY: Harper and Row.
Layous, K., Chancellor, J., Lyubomirsky, S., Wang, L., & Doraiswamy, P. M. (2011). Delivering happiness: Translating positive psychology intervention research for treating major and minor depressive disorders. The Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine, 17(8), 675–683. doi:10.1089/acm.2011.0139
MacIntyre, P. D. (2016). So far so
good: An overview of positive psychology and its contributions to SLA. In
Gabryś-Barker, D., & Gałajda, D. (Eds.), Positive psychology perspectives on foreign language learning and teaching
(pp. 3–20). Cham, Switzerland: Springer
International Publishing.
Oxford, R. L. (2016). Powerfully
Positive: Searching for a model of language learner well-being. In
Gabryś-Barker, D., & Gałajda, D. (Eds.), Positive psychology perspectives on foreign language learning and teaching
(pp. 21–38). Switzerland: Springer
International Publishing.
MacIntyre, P. D., Gregersen, T., & Mercer, S. (2016). Positive psychology in SLA. Bristol, UK: Multilingual Matters.
Seligman, M. E. P. (2011). Flourish: A visionary new understanding of
happiness and well-being. New York, NY: Atria Books.