International students’ emotional engagement with, and well-being during, an online EAP pre-sessional course

This study investigated students’ engagement with an online EAP pre-sessional course from a psychological perspective according to which engagement consists of four dimensions, namely behaviour, cognition, emotion, and conation (Kahu, 2013). This small-scale case study focused on the emotional dimen...

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Main Author: Ide Haghi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Liverpool University Press 2023-09-01
Series:International Journal of English for Academic Purposes
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.liverpooluniversitypress.co.uk/doi/10.3828/ijeap.2023.6
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author Ide Haghi
author_facet Ide Haghi
author_sort Ide Haghi
collection DOAJ
description This study investigated students’ engagement with an online EAP pre-sessional course from a psychological perspective according to which engagement consists of four dimensions, namely behaviour, cognition, emotion, and conation (Kahu, 2013). This small-scale case study focused on the emotional dimension of engagement in the aforementioned course that is usually ignored in the end-of-course evaluation surveys, which often only ask one question about overall satisfaction with a course. The emotional dimension was measured here in relation to immediate emotions such as enjoyment and interest (Furlong et al., 2003) as well as relationships and sense of belonging (Libbey, 2004). The study investigated how students perceived their emotional engagement with and their well-being during this online course, as well as what factors they considered as contributing to their emotional engagement and well-being while completing this course remotely. In doing so, a group of international students who took the course completed an online survey and attended follow-up focus groups to share their reflections on their emotional engagement and well-being (perceived stress) with a summer pre-sessional EAP course offered at a university in the U.K. The findings suggest that despite considering this online course experience as relatively stressful, the participants perceived emotional engagement with this course as high. However, among different aspects of emotional engagement investigated in this study, the sense of belonging to the course was rated comparatively low. This paper provides insights in relation to students’ emotional engagement with similar academic language courses and short courses alike to inform future online course design to enhance the student experience. This article was published open access under a CC BY licence: https://creativecommons.org/licences/by/4.0.
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spelling doaj-art-0519e03a4fbb44fbb098a0f09982bd302025-08-20T02:12:11ZengLiverpool University PressInternational Journal of English for Academic Purposes2634-46102023-09-01329711410.3828/ijeap.2023.6International students’ emotional engagement with, and well-being during, an online EAP pre-sessional courseIde Haghi0University of Glasgow, U.K.This study investigated students’ engagement with an online EAP pre-sessional course from a psychological perspective according to which engagement consists of four dimensions, namely behaviour, cognition, emotion, and conation (Kahu, 2013). This small-scale case study focused on the emotional dimension of engagement in the aforementioned course that is usually ignored in the end-of-course evaluation surveys, which often only ask one question about overall satisfaction with a course. The emotional dimension was measured here in relation to immediate emotions such as enjoyment and interest (Furlong et al., 2003) as well as relationships and sense of belonging (Libbey, 2004). The study investigated how students perceived their emotional engagement with and their well-being during this online course, as well as what factors they considered as contributing to their emotional engagement and well-being while completing this course remotely. In doing so, a group of international students who took the course completed an online survey and attended follow-up focus groups to share their reflections on their emotional engagement and well-being (perceived stress) with a summer pre-sessional EAP course offered at a university in the U.K. The findings suggest that despite considering this online course experience as relatively stressful, the participants perceived emotional engagement with this course as high. However, among different aspects of emotional engagement investigated in this study, the sense of belonging to the course was rated comparatively low. This paper provides insights in relation to students’ emotional engagement with similar academic language courses and short courses alike to inform future online course design to enhance the student experience. This article was published open access under a CC BY licence: https://creativecommons.org/licences/by/4.0.http://www.liverpooluniversitypress.co.uk/doi/10.3828/ijeap.2023.6students’ engagementemotional engagementstudent well-beingpre-sessional EAP courseonline language course
spellingShingle Ide Haghi
International students’ emotional engagement with, and well-being during, an online EAP pre-sessional course
International Journal of English for Academic Purposes
students’ engagement
emotional engagement
student well-being
pre-sessional EAP course
online language course
title International students’ emotional engagement with, and well-being during, an online EAP pre-sessional course
title_full International students’ emotional engagement with, and well-being during, an online EAP pre-sessional course
title_fullStr International students’ emotional engagement with, and well-being during, an online EAP pre-sessional course
title_full_unstemmed International students’ emotional engagement with, and well-being during, an online EAP pre-sessional course
title_short International students’ emotional engagement with, and well-being during, an online EAP pre-sessional course
title_sort international students emotional engagement with and well being during an online eap pre sessional course
topic students’ engagement
emotional engagement
student well-being
pre-sessional EAP course
online language course
url http://www.liverpooluniversitypress.co.uk/doi/10.3828/ijeap.2023.6
work_keys_str_mv AT idehaghi internationalstudentsemotionalengagementwithandwellbeingduringanonlineeappresessionalcourse