Teacher Well-Being in English Language Teaching

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AI Approach
appreciative inquiry methodology
Category=CJAD
Category=JMJ
compassion fatigue
Critical Feminist Lens
EAL Instructor
ecological
ELT
Elt Community
Elt Professional
Elt Teacher
emotion labor in education
Emotional Exhaustion
emotional inbalance
emotional labor
English Language Teachers
English language teaching
eq_bestseller
eq_dictionaries-language-reference
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
ESL Teacher
Final Reflective Essay
Language Ideologies
Language Teacher Candidates
language teacher stress
language teacher well-being interventions
macrosystem
mental exhaustion
Mercer
mesosystem
microsystem
Multimodal Composition
Personal Interpretive Framework
Professional Development
Professional Identity Construction
Radical Self-care
Reflective Practices
responsibility
second language educators
Self-care Practices
self-determination theory
teacher
Teacher Candidates
teacher well-being
TESOL
TESOL Profession
TESOL professional development
traumatic stress
Vicarious Trauma
vicarious trauma educators
well-being

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032324197
  • Weight: 503g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 11 Nov 2022
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This edited volume brings the important topic of teacher well-being to the fore, presenting a range of high quality and cutting-edge contributions that illuminate, advance and educate readers on the challenges and criticality of achieving teacher well-being in English language teaching (ELT). Taking Sarah Mercer’s call for action to make teacher well-being a priority in the ELT field, and adopting an ecological perspective reflective of the stance that teacher well-being is a societal duty and not a personal responsibility, the contributors present theoretically and methodologically innovative research studies from all around the world. The term ‘teacher’ is used to refer to those who deliver English instruction in a variety of formal and informal educational settings and at different levels including K-12 schools, adult education, higher education, teacher education programs, and in community organizations. Chapters offer clear implications for research and practice, and explore effective practices and interventions that can contribute to the improvement of teacher well-being overall. Addressing a profession which is not only characterized as being filled with high levels of stress, but delving into specific challenges around ELT in particular, the authors crucially speak to themes around the additional emotional investment and labor which come with being an English language teacher. As such, it will appeal to academics and researchers in the field of English language teaching, including scholar-practitioners, and teacher educators.

Luis Javier Pentón Herrera currently serves as Assistant Professor at the University of Warsaw, Poland, in the Department of Modern Languages and The Institute of Applied Linguistics. His current research focuses on social-emotional learning (SEL), emotions, and well-being in language and literacy education, Indigenous students from Latin America, immigrant and refugee education, and autoethnography and storytelling.

Gilda Martínez-Alba is the Assistant Dean at the College of Education at Towson University, Maryland, USA. Her research interests include English language teacher wellness, asset-based literacy instruction for multilingual learners, and social-emotional learning.

Ethan Trinh is a Vietnamese immigrant, activist, feminist, writer, queer researcher, and teacher educator pursuing their doctorate at the Middle and Secondary Education Department, Georgia State University, USA. Their research interests are autoethnography, storytelling, queer studies, and new materialism in English language teaching.